Tuning the glass-forming ability of metallic glasses through energetic frustration
Abstract
The design of multi-functional BMGs is limited by the lack of a quantitative understanding of the variables that control the glass-forming ability (GFA) of alloys. Both geometric frustration (e.g. differences in atomic radii) and energetic frustration (e.g. differences in the cohesive energies of the atomic species) contribute to the GFA. We perform molecular dynamics simulations of binary Lennard-Jones mixtures with only energetic frustration. We show that there is little correlation between the heat of mixing and critical cooling rate Rc, below which the system crystallizes, except that H mix < 0. By removing the effects of geometric frustration, we show strong correlations between Rc and the variables ε- = (εBB-εAA)/(εAA+εBB) and εAB = 2εAB/(εAA+εBB), where εAA and εBB are the cohesive energies of atoms A and B and εAB is the pair interaction between A and B atoms. We identify a particular fB-dependent combination of ε- and εAB that collapses the data for Rc over nearly 4 orders of magnitude in cooling rate.
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