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Excellent cryogenic mechanical properties of a novel medium-entropy alloy via vanadium-doping and hetero-grain/precipitation engineering.

Authors :
Peng, Hanlin
Hu, Ling
Li, Likun
Wang, Haiyan
Zhang, Yupeng
Huang, Siming
Li, Liejun
Baker, Ian
Source :
Materials Characterization. Jan2024, Vol. 207, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

A novel vanadium-doped f.c.c. medium-entropy alloy (MEA) Ni 42.4 Co 24.3 Cr 24.3 Al 3 Ti 3 V 3 was designed to achieve excellent cryogenic mechanical properties. The vanadium was added in order to increase the temperature-dependent friction stress, and aging of the MEA, which had been given a homogenization anneal at 1150 °C followed by cold-rolling to 80% reduction, at 700–900 °C was used both to produce partial recrystallization and precipitate L1 2 nanoparticles. Aging produced a heterogeneous microstructure composed of fine, soft recrystallized grains surrounded by harder, relatively-large non-recrystallized grains, containing L1 2 -precipitates. Increasing the aging temperature from 700 °C to 900 °C promoted V partitioning into the f.c.c. matrix with the partitioning coefficient increasing from 0.8 to 1.9; the grain size increasing from 2.3 μm to 4.6 μm; an increase in the precipitate size from 10.5 nm to 80.0 nm; a reduction in the residual geometrically-necessary dislocation (GND) density from 9.0 × 1014 m−2 to 2.8 × 1014 m−2; and a decrease in the volume fraction of precipitates fraction from 28% to 14%. All three aged MEAs showed extraordinary cryogenic mechanical properties with an increase in the aging temperature resulting in an increase in strength but a decrease in ductility, viz, a yield strength (YS) of 1929 MPa, an ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of 2147 MPa, and an elongation to failure (ε) of 6.6% at 700 °C, YS ∼ 1735 MPa, UTS ∼ 1976 MPa, ε ∼ 9.0% at 800 °C, and YS ∼ 1274 MPa, UTS ∼ 1694 MPa, ε ∼ 24.8% at 900 °C. The dislocation back stress rose progressively with increasing strain and was invariably higher than the effective stress, accounting for 51–59% of the flow stress i.e. the back stress played a dominant role in the ultrahigh flow stress. Increasing the aging temperature also produced a greater abundance of nanoscale deformation twins, stacking faults, and dislocation networks, which are responsible for excellent strain hardening capacity and greater ductility. After deformation, the density of low-angle grain boundaries increased by 3–6 times to 0.6–1.3 μm/μm2, and the GND density increased by 4–6 times to 1.2–2.0 × 1015 m−2. • V addition enhanced the cryogenic strength by 240–290 MPa and dcreased elongation. • V partitioned to the f.c.c. matrix instead of L1 2 -precipitates and thus improved friction stress. • MEA shows exceptional YS of 1274–1929 MPa, UTS of 1694–2147 MPa, and elongation of 6.6–24.8% at 77 K. • Increasing aging temperature produced more deformation twins, stacking faults, and dislocation networks. • Back-stress account for 51–59% of flow stress and was invariably higher than effective stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
10445803
Volume :
207
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Materials Characterization
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174605958
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.matchar.2023.113600