多选题
The intensive work of materials scientists and solid-state physicists
has given rise to a class of solids known as amorphous metallic alloys, or
glassy metals. There is a growing interest among theoretical and applied
researchers alike in the structural properties of these materials.
When a molten metal or metallic alloy is cooled to a solid, a crystalline
structure is formed that depends on the particular alloy composition. In
contrast, molten nonmetallic glass-forming materials, when cooled, do not assume
a crystalline structure, but instead retain a structure somewhat like that of
the liquid—an amorphous structure. At room temperature, the natural long-term
tendency for both types of materials is to assume the crystalline structure. The
difference between the two is in the kinetics or rate of formation of the
crystalline structure, which is controlled by factors such as the nature of the
chemical bonding and the ease with which atoms move relative to each other.
Thus, in metals, the kinetics favors rapid formation of a crystalline structure,
whereas in nonmetallic glasses the rate of formation is so slow that almost any
cooling rate is sufficient to result in an amorphous structure. For glassy
metals to be formed, the molten metal must be cooled extremely rapidly so that
crystallization is suppressed.
The structure of glassy metals
is thought to be similar to that of liquid metals. One of the first attempts to
model the structure of a liquid was that by the late J.D. Bernal of the
University of London, who packed hard spheres into a rubber vessel in such a way
as to obtain the maximum possible density. The resulting dense, random-packed
structure was the basis for many attempts to model the structure of glassy
metals. Calculations of the density of alloys based on Bernal-type models of the
alloys metal component agreed fairly well with the experimentally determined
values from measurements on alloys consisting of a noble metal together with a
metalloid, such as alloys of palladium and silicon, or alloys consisting of
iron, phosphorus, and carbon, although small discrepancies remained. One
difference between real alloys and the hard spheres used in Bernal models is
that the components of an alloy have different sizes, so that models based on
two sizes of spheres are more appropriate for a binary alloy, for example, the
smaller metalloid atoms of the alloy might fit into holes in the dense,
random-packed structure of the larger metal atoms.
One of the
most promising properties of glassy metals is their high strength combined with
high malleability. In usual crystalline materials, one finds an inverse relation
between the two properties, whereas for many practical applications simultaneous
presence of both properties is desirable. {{U}}One residual obstacle to practical
applications that is likely to be overcome is the fact that glassy metals will
crystallize at relatively low temperatures when heated slightly.{{/U}}
The author's attitude toward the prospects for the economic utilization
of glassy metals is one of ______.
- A. disinterest
- B. impatience
- C. optimism
- D. apprehension
- E. skepticism