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Negative creep of metallic glasses as an externally-catalyzed dissipative structure within Ginzburg–Landau kinetics

✍ Scribed by J.S. Kirkaldy


Publisher
Elsevier Science
Year
2005
Tongue
English
Weight
129 KB
Volume
409
Category
Article
ISSN
0921-5093

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✦ Synopsis


Negative creep concerns annealing temperatures of metallic glasses approaching ambient where normal densification is negligible but negative dimensional change is dramatically catalyzed by a LeChatelier-like load perturbation and initially accelerated against the load by temperature and load increase. This obtains on the isotherm up to the load point and time increment where normal creep in the opposite direction begins to counter the anomalous effects. The proposed dissipative structure is based upon strain as a global average order parameter satisfying the postulated timedependent Ginzburg-Landau (TDGL) equation and applied to Cu 60 Zr 40 at 473 K. This serves as the Euler-Lagrange equation corresponding to the experimentally verified Ostwald's Step Rule which subsumes autonomous selection for near reversibility and minimum dissipation or equivalent high free energy configurations en route to equilibrium thus sustaining the G-L postulate. This quench-induced self-organizing phenomenon can be conceived as a continuous stroke potential energy-increasing heat engine driven by the quenched-in thermal energy.