Nanoscale origins of the damage tolerance of the high-entropy alloy CrMnFeCoNi
Nature Communications 6(1)
Article 2015 English
Authors
ZZ
Zijiao Zhang
MM
Min Mao
JW
Jiangwei Wang
Abstract
1 min read
Damage tolerance can be an elusive characteristic of structural materials requiring both high strength and ductility, properties that are often mutually exclusive. High-entropy alloys are of interest in this regard. Specifically, the single-phase CrMnFeCoNi alloy displays tensile strength levels of ∼1 GPa, excellent ductility (∼60–70%) and exceptional fracture toughness ( K JIc >200 MPa√m). Here through the use of in situ straining in an aberration-corrected transmission electron microscope, we report on the salient atomistic to micro-scale mechanisms underlying the origin of these properties. We identify a synergy of multiple deformation mechanisms, rarely achieved in metallic alloys, which generates high strength, work hardening and ductility, including the easy motion of Shockley partials, their interactions to form stacking-fault parallelepipeds, and arrest at planar slip bands of undissociated dislocations. We further show that crack propagation is impeded by twinned, nanoscale bridges that form between the near-tip crack faces and delay fracture by shielding the crack tip.
Dong Liu, Qin Yu, Saurabh Kabra, Ming Jiang, Paul Forna-Kreutzer, Ruopeng Zhang, Madelyn I. Payne, Flynn Walsh, Bernd Gludovatz, Mark Asta, Andrew M. Minor, E.P. George, Robert O. Ritchie
Dong Liu, Qin Yu, Saurabh Kabra, Ming Jiang, Paul Forna-Kreutzer, Ruopeng Zhang, Madelyn I. Payne, Flynn Walsh, Bernd Gludovatz, Mark Asta, Andrew M. Minor, E.P. George, Robert O. Ritchie
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