Ultrastrong Medium‐Entropy Single‐Phase Alloys Designed via Severe Lattice Distortion

Seok Su Sohn(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Alisson Kwiatkowski da Silva(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Yuji Ikeda(Kyoto University), Fritz Körmann(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Wenjun Lu(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Won Seok Choi(Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology), Baptiste Gault(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Dirk Ponge(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Jörg Neugebauer(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien), Dierk Raabe(Max-Planck-Institut für Nachhaltige Materialien)
Advanced Materials
December 28, 2018
Cited by 577Open Access
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Abstract

Severe lattice distortion is a core effect in the design of multiprincipal element alloys with the aim to enhance yield strength, a key indicator in structural engineering. Yet, the yield strength values of medium- and high-entropy alloys investigated so far do not substantially exceed those of conventional alloys owing to the insufficient utilization of lattice distortion. Here it is shown that a simple VCoNi equiatomic medium-entropy alloy exhibits a near 1 GPa yield strength and good ductility, outperforming conventional solid-solution alloys. It is demonstrated that a wide fluctuation of the atomic bond distances in such alloys, i.e., severe lattice distortion, improves both yield stress and its sensitivity to grain size. In addition, the dislocation-mediated plasticity effectively enhances the strength-ductility relationship by generating nanosized dislocation substructures due to massive pinning. The results demonstrate that severe lattice distortion is a key property for identifying extra-strong materials for structural engineering applications.


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