The glass transition of bulk metallic glasses studied by real-time diffraction in transmission using high-energy synchrotron radiation

2004 ◽  
Vol 375-377 ◽  
pp. 709-712 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.R. Yavari ◽  
N. Nikolov ◽  
N. Nishiyama ◽  
T. Zhang ◽  
A. Inoue ◽  
...  
2004 ◽  
Vol 375-377 ◽  
pp. 351-354 ◽  
Author(s):  
N. Mattern ◽  
U. Kühn ◽  
H. Hermann ◽  
S. Roth ◽  
H. Vinzelberg ◽  
...  

2003 ◽  
Vol 806 ◽  
Author(s):  
Uwe Köster ◽  
Rainer Janlewing

ABSTRACTNanocrystalline materials can be produced e.g. by high energy ball milling or vacuum condensation; these methods require powder compaction as a final step. In another route - the nano-crystallization - metallic glasses are used as precursors for nanocrystalline materials without any porosity. The conditions for achieving an ultra-fine grained material by crystallization are small growth, but large nucleation rates. Whereas in Fe-Ni-B glasses the finest microstructure is produced at annealing temperatures above the glass transition close to the maximum of the nucleation rate, in Zr-based metallic glasses nanocrystallization was found to proceed only at relatively low temperatures below the glass transition. The aim of this contribution is to study systematically the micromechanisms involved in the microstructural design.Crystallization was studied in detail in Fe-Ni-B and Zr-based metallic glasses by means of TEM, X-ray diffraction and DSC. Nucleation and growth rates were estimated from crystallization statistics. By modeling the obtained time-dependent nucleation rates in the framework of diffusion controlled classical nucleation all relevant crystallization parameter could be derived. Using these data TTT-diagrams could be drawn and annealing conditions deducted, e.g. for the formation of a nanocrystalline alloy.Isothermal DSC plots for polymorphic crystallization can only be explained with a very significant decrease in the growth rate at later stages. Such a decrease is assumed to result from stresses building up during crystallization beyond the percolation limit for the crystalline phase; under this condition stresses resulting from the volume change during crystallization cannot be compensated by viscous flow as in the case of isolated crystals in an amorphous matrix.


1998 ◽  
Vol 554 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Pelletier ◽  
Y. Jacquemard ◽  
J. Perez ◽  
R. Perrier de la Bathie

AbstractTwo Zr-base bulk metallic glasses were investigated in the present work. DSC experiments were performed at different heating rates (dT/dt). Evolution of the characteristic temperatures, glass transition and onset of crystallisation, were determined as a function of dT/dt. Evolution of shear elastic modulus and internal friction are measured as a function of temperature and resulting microstructural evolution; these evolutions are related to variation of the atomic mobility.


2020 ◽  
Vol 91 (7) ◽  
pp. 073901
Author(s):  
Jiri Orava ◽  
Konrad Kosiba ◽  
Xiaoliang Han ◽  
Ivan Soldatov ◽  
Olof Gutowski ◽  
...  

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