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Outstanding tensile properties of a precipitation-strengthened FeCoNiCrTi0.2 high-entropy alloy at room and cryogenic temperatures

  • Y. Tong*
  • , D. Chen
  • , B. Han
  • , J. Wang
  • , R. Feng
  • , T. Yang
  • , C. Zhao
  • , Y. L. Zhao
  • , W. Guo
  • , Y. Shimizu
  • , C. T. Liu
  • , P. K. Liaw
  • , K. Inoue
  • , Y. Nagai
  • , A. Hu
  • , J. J. Kai
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • City University of Hong Kong
  • Tohoku University
  • University of Tennessee

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A FeCoNiCrTi0.2 high-entropy alloy strengthened by two types of coherent nano-precipitates but with the same composition was fabricated, and its tensile properties at room (293 K) and cryogenic temperatures (77 K) and the corresponding defect-structure evolution were investigated. Compared with the single-phase FeCoNiCr parent alloy, the precipitation-strengthened FeCoNiCrTi0.2 high-entropy alloy exhibits a significant increase in yield strength and ultimate tensile strength but with little sacrifice in ductility. Similar to the single-phase FeCoNiCr high-entropy alloy, the deformation behavior of this precipitation-strengthened FeCoNiCrTi0.2 high-entropy alloy shows strong temperature dependence. When the temperature decreases from 293 K to 77 K, its yield strength and ultimate tensile strength are increased from 700 MPa to 860 MPa and from 1.24 GPa to 1.58 GPa, respectively, associated with a ductility improvement from 36% to 46%. However, different from the single-phase FeCoNiCr high-entropy alloy with a twinning-dominant deformation mode at 77 K, multiple-layered stacking faults with a hierarchical substructure prevail in the precipitation-strengthened FeCoNiCrTi0.2 high-entropy alloy when deformed at 77 K. The mechanism of twinning inhibition in this precipitation-strengthened high-entropy alloy is the high energy barrier for twin nucleation in the ordered γ′ nano-particles. Our results may provide a guide for the design of tough high-entropy alloys for applications at cryogenic temperatures through combining precipitation strengthening and twinning/stacking faults.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)228-240
Number of pages13
JournalActa Materialia
Volume165
DOIs
StatePublished - 15 Feb 2019
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Deformation mechanism
  • High-entropy alloys
  • Precipitation strengthening
  • Stacking fault

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