Nomoto Keita, Bilal Huma, Li Bosong, Gludovatz Bernd, Gammer Christoph, Hohenwarter Anton, Eckert Jürgen, Kruzic Jamie J, Ringer Simon P
Australian Centre for Microscopy & Microanalysis, and School of Aerospace, Mechanical and Mechatronic Engineering, The University of Sydney, Camperdown, 2006, Australia.
School of Mechanical and Manufacturing Engineering, University of New South Wales (UNSW Sydney), Sydney, 2052, Australia.
Small Methods. 2025 Sep;9(9):e00980. doi: 10.1002/smtd.202500980. Epub 2025 Aug 14.
Bulk metallic glasses (BMGs) exhibit excellent mechanical properties due to their lack of long-range atomic ordering. However, understanding their structure-property relationships remains an unresolved challenge since traditional characterization methods have been unable to reveal the 3D nanostructures that control mechanical properties. In this study, a novel approach is developed that uses atom probe tomography (APT) cluster analysis to identify and visualize 3D nanoscale solute-rich clusters in Zr-based BMGs and quantify their size, composition, spatial distribution, and volume fraction. These results show that hardness variations in BMGs are driven by the volume fraction and distribution of solute-rich clusters. By inputting these experimentally determined parameters into a model for ductile phase softening, the deformation mechanisms of BMGs are elucidated as being controlled by the solute-rich clusters, and their possible relationship with topologically ordered short- and medium-range ordered clusters is discussed. This methodological breakthrough in characterizing structure-property relationships in metallic glasses is applicable to a wide range of multicomponent amorphous materials and is anticipated to enable major advances in glass science.