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Structure formation in liquid and amorphous metallic alloys
Institution:Leibniz-Institute for Solid State and Materials Research, IFW Dresden, P.O. Box 270116, D-01171 Dresden, Germany;Institute of Physics, Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, Prague, Czech Republic
Abstract:Bulk metallic glasses developed in last 15 years represent a new class of amorphous metallic alloys. These multi-component metallic alloys can be obtained at relatively low cooling rates, which allow the production of large-scale materials by conventional casting processes. Furthermore, bulk metallic glasses show a glass transition well below the crystallization temperature enabling hot deformation, but also to investigate the glass transition phenomenon in a metallic system. The thermal behavior of Zr- and Pd-based bulk metallic glasses was studied by in situ X-ray diffraction at elevated temperatures. The temperature dependence of the X-ray structure factor of the glassy state can be well described by the Debye theory. At the caloric glass transition the temperature dependence of the structure alters, pointing to a continuous development of structural changes in the liquid state. The short-range order of the glass, of the super-cooled liquid, and of the equilibrium melt is found to be very similar. The existence of complex chemically ordered clusters in the melt is supposed to be related to the high glass-forming ability of the alloys. The microstructure of metallic glasses consisting of elements with negative enthalpy of mixing is homogeneous at dimensions above 1 nm. Phase separation in the liquid state appears in metallic systems with large positive enthalpy of mixing of the elements like Nb–Y. Thermodynamic calculations of the Ni–Nb–Y phase diagram show that the miscibility gap of the monotectic binary Nb–Y system extends into the ternary up to large Ni content. Experimental evidence of the phase separation in ternary Ni–Nb–Y melts is obtained by in situ X-ray diffraction at elevated temperatures and differential scanning calorimetry. The phase separated melt can be frozen into a two-phase amorphous metallic alloy by rapid quenching from the liquid. The microstructure depends on the chemical composition and consists of two amorphous regions, one Nb-enriched and the other Y-enriched, with a size distribution from several nanometers up to micrometer dimension. The experimental results confirm the close relationship between the structure of metallic glasses and the corresponding under-cooled liquids.
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