2009 APS March Meeting 
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session D3: Pake, McGroddy, and Industrial Application of Physics Prizes, Adler Award
2:30 PM–5:30 PM, 
Monday, March 16, 2009
Room: 301/302
Sponsoring
Units: 
FIAP DMP
Chair: Mark Lee, Sandia National Laboratories
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.D3.4
Abstract: D3.00004 : James C. McGroddy Prize Talk: Development and Applications of Bulk Metallic Glasses
4:18 PM–4:54 PM
Preview Abstract
  
  Abstract  
Author:
Akihisa Inoue
(World Premier Initiative, Advanced Institute for Materials Research (WPI-AIMR), Tohoku University)
We realized, through detailed amorphous material investigations
in the 
1980's, that a number of metallic glassy alloys of
multi-component La-, Mg- 
and Zr-based systems exhibit a large supercooled-liquid region
prior to 
crystallization. The stabilization phenomenon of these
supercooled liquid 
should enable us to fabricate, by slow cooling processes, bulk
metallic 
glasses (BMGs) with critical diameters larger than several
millimeters. 
Caltech's group also succeeded the fabrication of BMG in Zr-based
alloy 
system in 1993. Since then, much attention has been paid to BMGs
because of 
their novel characteristics in basic science and engineering
aspects and new 
materials science and engineering fields have emerged for BMGs.
Based on 
knowledge obtained thus far, we have successfully developed new
BMGs with 
technologically-important transition metals, such as Zr-, Ti-,
Fe-, Co-, Ni- 
and Cu-based alloys. Currently, the maximum diameter for glass
formation 
reaches 30 mm for Zr- and Cu-based systems, 12 mm for Ti-based
system, 18 mm 
for Fe-Co-based system and 20 mm for Ni-based system, even
employing the 
copper mold casting technique. These large size BMGs possess
nearly the same 
fundamental properties as those of the BMGs with smaller
diameters. BMGs 
with diameters above 10 mm can be formed in Zr-Al-Ni-Cu system
with Zr 
compositions higher than 65 at{\%} and they exhibit excellent
properties, 
such as high Poisson's ratio, high ductility, high fracture
toughness, high 
fatigue strength and high stability of mechanical properties to 
annealing-induced embrittlement. The new Ti-based BMGs without
allergic and 
toxic elements should exhibit good compatibility to bio-tissues. 
Applications of BMGs in Fe-, Co-, Ti- and Zr-based systems have
advanced 
many devices including the following; choke coil, power inductor,
electro 
magnetic shielding, magnetic and position sensors, micro-geared
motor, 
pressure sensor, Coriolis flowmeter, surface coating layer, precise 
polishing medium, magnetic and structural parts in electric magnetic 
control-type spring drive watches, medical operation instruments
and so 
forth.
A. Inoue, Acta Mater., 48(2000), 279-306.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.D3.4