Fundamental Link between β Relaxation, Excess Wing, and Cage-Breaking in Metallic Glasses

ORAL

Abstract

In glassy materials, the Johari-Goldstein secondary (β) relaxation is crucial to many properties, as it is directly related to local atomic motions. However, a long-standing puzzle remains elusive: why some glasses exhibit β relaxations as pronounced peaks while others as unobvious excess wings? Using microseconds atomistic simulation of two model metallic glasses (MGs), we demonstrate such a difference is associated with the amount of string-like collective atomic jumps. Relative to that of excess wings, we find that MGs having pronounced β relaxations contain larger numbers of such jumps. Structurally, they are promoted by the higher tendency of cages-breaking events of their neighbors. Our results provide atomistic insights for different signatures of the β relaxation that could be helpful for understanding the low-temperature dynamics and properties of MGs.

*Work conducted at Ames Laboratory was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Basic Energy Sciences, Materials Science and Engineering Division, under Contract No. DEAC02-07CH11358, including a grant of computer time at the National Energy Research Supercomputing Center (NERSC) in Berkeley, CA.

Presenters

  • Menghao Yang

    • Ames Laboratory

Authors

  • Menghao Yang

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Haibin Yu

    • Huazhong University of Science and Technology
  • Yang Sun

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Feng Zhang

    • Ames Laboratory
  • Jianbo Liu

    • Tsinghua University
  • Cai-Zhuang Wang

    • Ames Laboratory
    • Physics, Iowa State University
  • Kai-Ming Ho

    • Ames Laboratory
    • Iowa State University
    • Physics, Iowa State University
  • Ranko Richert

    • Arizona State University
  • Konrad Samwer

    • Universität Göttingen