Yale engineer readies for rapid discovery of metallic glasses

04 Nov 2014

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Yale engineer Jan Schroers will lead a three-year, $1.2-million project intended to dramatically accelerate the pace of discovering and characterising bulk metallic glasses (BMGs), a versatile type of pliable glass that's stronger than steel.

The grant, awarded as part of the National Science Foundation's program for Designing Materials to Revolutionise and Engineer our Future, will enable Schroers' team to screen more than 3,000 potential BMG alloys in a week, a vast improvement over traditional methods that take as much as a full day to identify a single alloy.

''With this project, we can bring materials discovery to a new level, reducing the time for identifying all possible BMG alloys from a projected 4,000 years to perhaps as little as four years,'' said Schroers, a professor of mechanical engineering and materials science at the Yale School of Engineering & Applied Science.

The project will produce and characterise millions of potential BMGs, a significant increase over the 120,000 BMGs produced and characterised to date by traditional methods - just 100 of which are good glass formers. The key to this advancement, said Schroers, is the combination of three integrated computational and experimental techniques, each pioneered by a different team member.

First, Stefano Curtarolo of Duke University will use combinatorial simulations to rapidly analyse the crystalline structures for thousands of potential alloys. Schroers will then examine the fabrication abilities of the best alloys identified by Curturaolo by simultaneously testing thousands of millimeter-size, controllably-mixed alloys for their ability to generate bubble gum-like bubbles - a technique that indicates alloy pliability. Finally, Joost Vlassak of Harvard University will rapidly characterize the best performing alloys using nanocalorimetry, a method that measures various thermal properties such as the melting and glass transition temperatures.

''There are strong arguments that metallic glasses are an ideal problem for this kind of combinatorial materials science because they are extremely complex, with up to six element alloys,'' said Schroers, who added that the ideal plurality of properties for a BMG - reasonable costs, appropriate strength and toughness, corrosion resistance - has been extremely difficult to find using the slow trial-and-error of traditional methods.

''Currently, our most successful alloy is platinum-based, and it has everything except the price,'' said Schroers. ''We hope to find instead a copper- or aluminum-based alloy, which would effectively bring these very cool materials out of the lab and into everyday life.''

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