4.7 Article

Exploration of the icosahedral clusters in Ni-Nb binary metallic glasses via first-principles theory

Journal

JOURNAL OF NON-CRYSTALLINE SOLIDS
Volume 575, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jnoncrysol.2021.121232

Keywords

Metallic glasses; Icosahedron stability; Electronic structure; First-principles theory; GFA

Funding

  1. China National Natural Science Foundation [52071217]

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The study showed that the binding energy of icosahedral clusters decreases when the atoms in the cluster prefer to bond together, leading to relative stability. In Ni-Nb metallic glasses, the glass-forming ability is attributed to the synergistic effect of electronic stability and topological stability of icosahedral clusters.
The binding energy, chemical ordering parameters, and electronic structure of Ni-centered NinNb13-n(n = 6, 7, 8, 9) icosahedral clusters were studied in accordance with the first-principles theory. These calculations demonstrated that the binding energy of the icosahedral clusters decreased when the homogeneous shell atoms preferred to bond together. The density of state at the E-F of most icosahedral clusters was near a gap, indicating that all icosahedral clusters were in a relatively stable state. For the icosahedral cluster, the states near the Fermi level were dominated by Ni- and Nb-d electrons. The electron-localization function analysis of the most stable and unstable structures in icosahedral clusters showed that chemical bonding favored the formation of icosahedral clusters by introducing a string-like or net-like structure and further stabilized icosahedral clusters. The origin of glass-forming ability (GFA) was the synergistic effect of electronic stability and topological stability of icosahedral clusters in Ni-Nb metallic glasses.

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