Ultrahigh Poisson's ratio glasses
Abstract
The manner in which metallic glasses fail under external loading is known to correlate well with those glasses' Poisson's ratio : low- (compressible) glasses typically feature brittle failure patterns with scarce plastic deformation, while high- (incompressible) glasses typically fail in a ductile manner, accompanied by a high degree of plastic deformation and extensive liquid-like flow. Since the technological utility of metallic glasses depends on their ductility, materials scientists have been concerned with fabricating high- glassy alloys. To shed light on the underlying micromechanical origin of high- metallic glasses, we employ computer simulations of a simple glass-forming model with a single tunable parameter that controls the interparticle-potential's stiffness. We show that the presented model gives rise to ultra high- glasses, reaching \!=\!0.45 and thus exceeding the most incompressible laboratory metallic glass. We discuss the possible role of the so-called unjamming transition in controlling the elasticity of ultra high- glasses. To this aim, we show that our higher- computer glasses host relatively softer quasilocalized glassy excitations, and establish relations between their associated characteristic frequency, macroscopic elasticity, and mechanical disorder.
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