Multiscale Manufacturing of Amorphous Alloys by a Facile Electrodeposition Approach and Their Property Dependence on the Local Atomic Order

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2021 Feb 24;13(7):9260-9271. doi: 10.1021/acsami.0c22153. Epub 2021 Feb 15.

Abstract

Metallic glasses are a unique class of materials combining ultrahigh strength together with plastic-like processing ability. However, the currently used melt quenching route to obtain amorphous alloys has a high cost basis in terms of manufacturing and expensive constituent elements often necessary to achieve the glassy state, thus hindering widespread adoption. In contrast, multimaterial electrodeposition offers a low-cost and versatile alternative to obtain amorphous alloys. Here, we demonstrate multiscale manufacturing of a model binary amorphous system by a facile and scalable pulsed electrodeposition approach. The structural and mechanical characteristics of electrodeposited Ni-P metallic glasses are investigated by a combination of experiments and molecular dynamics simulations. The property dependence on slight change in alloy chemistry is explained by the fraction of short-range-order clusters and geometrically unfavorable motifs. Bicapped square antiprism polyhedra clusters with two-atom connections result in more homogeneous deformation for Ni90P10 metallic glass, whereas a relatively higher fraction of three-atom connections in Ni85P15 metallic glass leads to higher strength, albeit localized and relatively brittle failure. The practicality of our approach is likely to stimulate the use of amorphous alloys in simple chemistries for multiscale use with systematic property optimization for specific applications.

Keywords: amorphous alloys; atomic ordering; manufacturing; molecular dynamics simulation; multiscale.