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Published January 3, 2005 | public
Journal Article Open

Noncontact measurement of high-temperature surface tension and viscosity of bulk metallic glass-forming alloys using the drop oscillation technique

Abstract

High-temperature surface tension and viscosities for five bulk metallic glass-forming alloys with widely different glass-forming abilities are measured. The measurements are carried out in a high-vacuum electrostatic levitator using the drop oscillation technique. The surface tension follows proportional mathematical addition of pure components' surface tension except when some of the constituent elements have much lower surface tension. In such cases, there is surface segregation of the low surface tension elements. These alloys are found to have orders of magnitude higher viscosity at their melting points compared to the constituent metals. Among the bulk glass-forming alloys, the better glass former has a higher melting-temperature viscosity, which demonstrates that high-temperature viscosity has a pronounced influence on glass-forming ability. Correlations between surface tension and viscosity are also investigated.

Additional Information

©2005 American Institute of Physics (Received 4 August 2004; accepted 3 November 2004; published online 28 December 2004) This work was carried out at California Institute of Technology under a contract with the National Aeronautical and Space Administration (Grant No. NNMO4AA21G).

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August 22, 2023
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