Nonequilibrium plastic roughening of metallic glasses yields self-affine topographies with strain-rate and temperature-dependent scaling exponents
Abstract
We study nonequilibrium roughening during compressive plastic flow of initially flat Cu50Zr50 metallic glass using large-scale molecular dynamics simulations. Roughness emerges at atomically flat interfaces beyond the yield point of the glass. A self-affine rough topography is imprinted at yield and is reinforced during subsequent deformation. The imprinted topographies have Hurst exponents that decrease with increasing strain-rate and temperature. After yield, the root-mean-square roughness amplitude grows as the square-root of the applied strain with a prefactor that also drops with increasing strain-rate and temperature. Our calculations reveal the emergence of spatial power-law correlations from homogeneous samples during plastic flow with exponents that depend on the rate of deformation and the temperature. The results have implications for interpreting and engineering roughness profiles.