1 / 2

100 nm

Materials World Network: Structures and Mechanical Behavior of Metallic-Glass Thin Films Peter K. Liaw, University of Tennessee Knoxville, DMR 0909037. Goals and Objectives :

jela
Télécharger la présentation

100 nm

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Materials World Network: Structures and Mechanical Behavior of Metallic-Glass Thin FilmsPeter K. Liaw, University of Tennessee Knoxville, DMR 0909037 • Goals and Objectives: • While bulk metallic glasses (BMG) are brittle, metallic-glass thin films can be ductile and lead to enhanced fatigue resistance of structural materials coated with these amorphous films. • In collaboration with Prof. J.P. Chu of Taiwan, this Materials World Network program aims to design such films and to understand the fatigue mechanisms. • Findings: • Constitutive response of metallic glasses near a glass-transition temperature, Tg (Fig. 1) – aiming to develop a predictive micromechanical model with a direct connection to shear-banding kinetics • Fatigue-crack initiation caused by substrate slips can be suppressed by a strong interface adhesion and thin-film ductility (as accommodated by shear bands) – a high-resolution transmission-electron-microscopy image of a Zr-based metallic glass film on a stainless steel substrate (Fig. 2) Fig. 1: Rate-dependence of Au-based BMG near its Tg Shear bands and microstructures are of critical importance to understand the fatigue-crack initiation behavior Shear band ? Film Glass-forming thin film Sub-strate Substrate slip bands can be suppressed by thin-film plastic deformation Slip band Fig. 2: A proposed fatigue-initiation mechanism and preliminary microstructural evidence 100 nm

  2. Materials World Network: Structures and Mechanical Behavior of Metallic-Glass Thin Films Peter K. Liaw, University of Tennessee Knoxville, DMR 0909037 PI (Liaw) discusses metallic-glass research at a poster session of the Spallation Neutron Source Workshop (Jan. 2010) at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A, Vol. 47, No. 7, July 2010 -- Special Issue of Symposium on Bulk Metallic Glasses VI (TMS Annual Meeting, San Francisco, CA, 2/15-2/19/2009), edited by P.K. Liaw, H. Choo, Y.F. Gao, & G.Y. Wang of The University of Tennessee Co-PI (Gao) with his high-school students and undergraduate as part of the 2010 UT Math and Science Center Summer School (for rural county high schools in East Tennessee) 2010 TMS Annual Meeting & Exhibition, Symposium on Bulk Metallic Glasses VII, sponsored by TMS/ASM Mechanical Behavior of Materials Committee, organized by P.K. Liaw, H. Choo, Y.F. Gao, & G.Y. Wang, held at Seattle, WA, 2/14-2/18/2010

More Related