Author/Authors :
Alain Reza Yavari، نويسنده , , Alain Le Moulec، نويسنده , , Akihisa Inoue، نويسنده , , Nobuyuki Nishiyama، نويسنده , , Nicoleta Lupu، نويسنده , , Eiichiro Matsubara، نويسنده , , Walter José Botta، نويسنده , , Gavin Vaughan، نويسنده , , Marco Di Michiel، نويسنده , , ?ke Kvick، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
In crystalline materials, lattice expansion as measured by diffraction methods differs from the expansion of the sample dimensions as measured by dilatometry, due to the contribution of thermal vacancies to the latter. We have found that in glassy materials and metallic glasses in particular, this is not the case for the contribution of free volume. These findings are the first direct experimental confirmation of simulation results indicating that atomic size holes are unstable in glasses such that free volume is dispersed randomly. This allows direct measurement of excess free volume in glasses using diffraction methods in place of dilatometry, which is difficult to use once the sample softens at the glass transition temperature Tg and above. Quenched-in and deformation-induced free-volume ΔVf were measured by X-ray diffraction in transmission during heating using synchrotron light. The measured thermal expansion coefficients αth were the same as in dilatometry. The glass transition Tg appeared as a break in the value of αth at Tg. The “change-of-slope method” was applied to the kinetics of relaxation to derive the activation energy for the free-volume annihilation process.
Keywords :
Metallic glass , Free volume , Deformation , Synchrotron light , Thermal expansion , diffraction , relaxation