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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 February 2011
In bulk metallic glasses cooled at nearly the critical cooling rate for glass formation, nucleation is observed to be spatially localized; nanocrystals are clustered together in spherical regions. This implies that a positive feedback mechanism locally increases the nucleation rate in the vicinity of other nucleation events. Linear stability analysis and computer simulation of differential equations describing crystal nucleation and growth are used to theoretically examine the plausibility of different potential feedback mechanisms. It is shown that interactions between different crystallizing phases can lead to counter-intuitive composition dependence of the crystallization kinetics in the case of non-polymorphic crystallization.