Mechanisms of Failure in Nanoscale Metallic Glass
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Abstract
The emergence of size-dependent mechanical
strength in nanosized
materials is now well-established, but no fundamental understanding
of fracture toughness or flaw sensitivity in nanostructures exists.
We report the fabrication and in situ fracture testing of ∼70
nm diameter Ni–P metallic glass samples with a structural flaw.
Failure occurs at the structural flaw in all cases, and the failure
strength of flawed samples was reduced by 40% compared to unflawed
samples. We explore deformation and failure mechanisms in a similar
nanometallic glass via molecular dynamics simulations, which corroborate
sensitivity to flaws and reveal that the structural flaw shifts the
failure mechanism from shear banding to cavitation. We find that failure
strength and deformation in amorphous nanosolids depend critically
on the presence of flaws