TY - JOUR
T1 - Influence of Zr and Sn alloying on phase stability, microstructure, and mechanical behavior of Ti-12Mo-4Al metastable β titanium alloys
T2 - An atomic-scale study
AU - Li, Pengfei
AU - Yang, Lin
AU - Zhang, Fei
AU - Hao, Pengfei
AU - Zhu, Zijiang
AU - Qi, Haoyue
AU - Fan, Qunbo
AU - Cheng, Xingwang
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Acta Materialia Inc.
PY - 2026/8/1
Y1 - 2026/8/1
N2 - The stabilization of the metastable β phase in titanium alloys is crucial for achieving superior mechanical properties, yet the atomistic mechanisms by which neutral elements like Zr and Sn enhance β stability remain contentious. Here, using the same Ti-12Mo-4Al alloy matrix to ensure identical chemical and structural conditions, we introduce Zr and Sn as separate solute additions to enable a direct and controlled comparison of their individual effects on β-phase stability. By integrating first-principles calculations with a mapping-SQS modeling strategy and targeted experiments, we quantify the distinct thermodynamic and kinetic pathways through which each element interacts with the β lattice. Both Zr and Sn enhance β-phase stability by simultaneously suppressing α′ and ω formation, with Sn exhibiting superior thermodynamic and kinetic efficacy. We show that Sn is significantly more effective than Zr: it raises the kinetic barrier for martensitic transformation by >200 meV/atom at only 3 wt.%, and reverses the thermodynamic stability at 7 wt.%, effectively preventing the transformation. Differential charge density analysis reveals the electronic origins of this disparity: Zr acts through localized bond reinforcement, whereas Sn induces a profound, delocalized Ti-Sn coupling that greatly enhances lattice rigidity. These mechanisms cooperatively alter β stability in Ti-Mo-(Zr/Sn) alloys, establishing a quantitative link between alloy composition, bonding character, and transformation energetics. Our findings provide an electronic-structure framework for designing β-titanium alloys with tailored metastability.
AB - The stabilization of the metastable β phase in titanium alloys is crucial for achieving superior mechanical properties, yet the atomistic mechanisms by which neutral elements like Zr and Sn enhance β stability remain contentious. Here, using the same Ti-12Mo-4Al alloy matrix to ensure identical chemical and structural conditions, we introduce Zr and Sn as separate solute additions to enable a direct and controlled comparison of their individual effects on β-phase stability. By integrating first-principles calculations with a mapping-SQS modeling strategy and targeted experiments, we quantify the distinct thermodynamic and kinetic pathways through which each element interacts with the β lattice. Both Zr and Sn enhance β-phase stability by simultaneously suppressing α′ and ω formation, with Sn exhibiting superior thermodynamic and kinetic efficacy. We show that Sn is significantly more effective than Zr: it raises the kinetic barrier for martensitic transformation by >200 meV/atom at only 3 wt.%, and reverses the thermodynamic stability at 7 wt.%, effectively preventing the transformation. Differential charge density analysis reveals the electronic origins of this disparity: Zr acts through localized bond reinforcement, whereas Sn induces a profound, delocalized Ti-Sn coupling that greatly enhances lattice rigidity. These mechanisms cooperatively alter β stability in Ti-Mo-(Zr/Sn) alloys, establishing a quantitative link between alloy composition, bonding character, and transformation energetics. Our findings provide an electronic-structure framework for designing β-titanium alloys with tailored metastability.
KW - Alloying
KW - First-principles calculations
KW - Mechanical properties
KW - Metastableβ titanium alloys
KW - Microstructure
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105038349140
U2 - 10.1016/j.actamat.2026.122310
DO - 10.1016/j.actamat.2026.122310
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105038349140
SN - 1359-6454
VL - 314
JO - Acta Materialia
JF - Acta Materialia
M1 - 122310
ER -