Negative mixing enthalpy solid solutions deliver high strength and ductility

Zibing An, Ang Li, Shengcheng Mao*, Tao Yang, Lingyu Zhu, Rui Wang, Zhaoxuan Wu, Bin Zhang, Ruiwen Shao, Cheng Jiang, Boxuan Cao, Caijuan Shi, Yang Ren, Cheng Liu, Haibo Long, Jianfei Zhang, Wei Li, Feng He, Ligang Sun, Junbo ZhaoLuyan Yang, Xiaoyuan Zhou, Xiao Wei, Yunmin Chen, Zhouguang Lu, Fuzeng Ren, Chain Tsuan Liu, Ze Zhang, Xiaodong Han*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

58 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Body-centred cubic refractory multi-principal element alloys (MPEAs), with several refractory metal elements as constituents and featuring a yield strength greater than one gigapascal, are promising materials to meet the demands of aggressive structural applications1–6. Their low-to-no tensile ductility at room temperature, however, limits their processability and scaled-up application7–10. Here we present a HfNbTiVAl10 alloy that shows remarkable tensile ductility (roughly 20%) and ultrahigh yield strength (roughly 1,390 megapascals). Notably, these are among the best synergies compared with other related alloys. Such superb synergies derive from the addition of aluminium to the HfNbTiV alloy, resulting in a negative mixing enthalpy solid solution, which promotes strength and favours the formation of hierarchical chemical fluctuations (HCFs). The HCFs span many length scales, ranging from submicrometre to atomic scale, and create a high density of diffusive boundaries that act as effective barriers for dislocation motion. Consequently, versatile dislocation configurations are sequentially stimulated, enabling the alloy to accommodate plastic deformation while fostering substantial interactions that give rise to two unusual strain-hardening rate upturns. Thus, plastic instability is significantly delayed, which expands the plastic regime as ultralarge tensile ductility. This study provides valuable insights into achieving a synergistic combination of ultrahigh strength and large tensile ductility in MPEAs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)697-702
Number of pages6
JournalNature
Volume625
Issue number7996
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 25 Jan 2024

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