Effects of minor alloying on the mechanical properties of Al based metallic glasses
Vrishank Jambur, Chaiyapat Tangpatjaroen, Jianqi Xi, Jirameth, Tarnsangpradit, Meng Gao, Howard Sheng, John Perepezko, Izabela Szlufarska

TL;DR
This paper reveals that minor alloying enhances the strength of Al-based metallic glasses primarily through increased chemical bond strength, independent of topological structural changes, offering new insights for designing stronger MGs.
Contribution
It demonstrates that chemical bonding effects, separate from topological order, can significantly improve the mechanical strength of metallic glasses.
Findings
Alloying with transition metals increases hardness of Al-based MGs.
Strengthening is due to stronger Al-TM bonds, not topological changes.
Topology around TM atoms does not influence mechanical response.
Abstract
Minor alloying is widely used to control mechanical properties of metallic glasses (MGs). The present understanding of how a small amount of alloying element changes strength is that the additions lead to more efficient packing of atoms and increased local topological order, which then increases the barrier for shear transformations and the resistance to plastic deformation. Here, we discover that minor alloying can improve the strength of MGs by increasing the chemical bond strength alone and show that this strengthening is distinct from changes in topological order. The results were obtained using Al-Sm based MGs minor alloyed with transition metals (TMs). The addition of TMs led to an increase in the hardness of the MGs which, however, could not be explained based on changes in the topological ordering in the structure. Instead we found that it was the strong bonding between TM and…
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