Citation
Hofmann, Douglas Clayton (2009) Designing Bulk Metallic Glass Matrix Composites with High Toughness and Tensile Ductility. Dissertation (Ph.D.), California Institute of Technology. doi:10.7907/CJZ7-VV41. https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09102008-101837
Abstract
Metallic glasses have been the subject of intense scientific study since the 1960s, owing to their unique properties such as high strength, large elastic limit, high hardness, and amorphous microstructure. However, bulk metallic glasses have not been used in the high strength structural applications for which they have so much potential, owing to a highly localized failure mechanism that results in catastrophic failure during unconfined loading. In this thesis, bulk metallic glass matrix composites are designed with the combined benefits of high yield strengths and tensile ductility. This milestone is achieved by first investigating the length scale of the highly localized deformation, known as shear bands, that governs fracture in all metallic glasses. Under unconfined loading, a shear band grows to a certain length that is dependent on the fracture toughness of the glass before a crack nucleates and fracture occurs. Increasing the fracture toughness and ductility involves adding microstructural stabilization techniques that prevent shear bands from lengthening and promotes formation of multiple shear bands. To accomplish this, we develop in-situ formed bulk metallic glass matrix-composites with soft crystalline dendrites whose size and distribution are controlled through a novel semi-solid processing technique. The new alloys have a dramatically increased room-temperature ductility and a fracture toughness that appears to be similar to the toughest steels. Owing to their low modulus, the composites are therefore among the toughest known materials, a claim that has recently been confirmed independently by a fracture mechanics group. We extend our toughening strategy to a titanium-vanadium-based glass-dendrite composite system with density as low as 4.97 g/cm3. The new low-density composites rival the mechanical properties of the best structural crystalline Ti alloys. We demonstrate new processing techniques available in the highly toughened composites: room temperature cold rolling, work hardening, and thermoplastic forming. This thesis is a proven road map for developing metallic glass composites into real structural engineering materials.
Item Type: | Thesis (Dissertation (Ph.D.)) | ||||||||||||
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Subject Keywords: | amorphous metals; bulk metallic glasses; dendrites; ductility; fracture; matrix composites; metallic glass composites; processing; tensile ductility; toughness | ||||||||||||
Degree Grantor: | California Institute of Technology | ||||||||||||
Division: | Engineering and Applied Science | ||||||||||||
Major Option: | Materials Science | ||||||||||||
Thesis Availability: | Public (worldwide access) | ||||||||||||
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Defense Date: | 23 July 2008 | ||||||||||||
Non-Caltech Author Email: | dhofmann (AT) gmail.com | ||||||||||||
Record Number: | CaltechETD:etd-09102008-101837 | ||||||||||||
Persistent URL: | https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechETD:etd-09102008-101837 | ||||||||||||
DOI: | 10.7907/CJZ7-VV41 | ||||||||||||
Related URLs: |
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Default Usage Policy: | No commercial reproduction, distribution, display or performance rights in this work are provided. | ||||||||||||
ID Code: | 3438 | ||||||||||||
Collection: | CaltechTHESIS | ||||||||||||
Deposited By: | Imported from ETD-db | ||||||||||||
Deposited On: | 23 Oct 2008 | ||||||||||||
Last Modified: | 26 Nov 2019 19:14 |
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