Firestone Race Tires made with guayule rubber make INDYCAR debut; commercial use of guayule rubber in tires by 2030
Ingevity enters EV battery market with $60M investment in lithium-ion anode materials producer Nexeon

Researchers discover new mechanism to increase the strength and ductility of high-entropy alloys

Researchers from the City University of Hong Kong, Hunan University, Central South University in China and the University of Tennessee has discovered a new mechanism to increase the strength and the ductility of a high-entropy alloy. The findings provide important insights for the future design of strong yet ductile high-entropy alloys and high-entropy ceramics. A paper on the work is published in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS).

The strength-ductility trade-off is a longstanding issue for conventional alloys that are usually based on one or two principal elements, meaning that increasing the strength usually sacrifices ductility. In the past decade, a new alloy design strategy was proposed: mixing at least four multiple principal elements to form alloys, termed “multi-principal element alloys” (MPEAs) or “high-entropy alloys” (HEAs). (Earlier post.) MPEAs exhibit excellent mechanical properties, such as both great ductility and superb strength.

These excellent mechanical properties are believed to originate from severe atomic lattice distortion caused by the random mixing of multiple principal elements with distinct atomic sizes, bonding variations, and crystal structure differences, which in turn lead to a heterogeneous lattice strain effect.

However, the heterogeneous lattice strain field (a strain field refers to the distribution of strain through part of a body) is difficult to quantify and characterize, so its impact on strengthening alloys via three-dimensional (3D) dynamic dislocation has been ignored until recently.

The latest experiments and a series of simulations done by the research team co-led by Professor Yang Yong, in CityU’s Department of Mechanical Engineering, and Professor Fang Qihong, at Hunan University, show that the heterogeneous strain field could contribute to the enhanced mechanical properties of MPEAs through the new heterogeneous strain-induced strengthening mechanisms, leading to strength-ductility synergy in the alloys.

Fig 3

Stress-strain curve and dislocation configuration/evolution in MPEAs. (A) is a diagram of DDD simulations for MPEAs. Photo source: Li, Jia et al.


Materials science and engineering textbooks traditionally list four ductility-strengthening mechanisms: dislocation strengthening, solute strengthening, grain boundary strengthening and precipitation strengthening. This textbook knowledge has been taught for hundreds of years in universities to students majoring in materials science, mechanical engineering and applied physics. Now we have discovered a new ductility-strengthening mechanism through experiments and numerical simulations, which we call heterogeneous lattice strain strengthening.

—Professor Yang

Unlike traditional strengthening mechanisms, which usually lead to a strength-ductility trade-off, this newly discovered strengthening mechanism promotes strength-ductility synergy, which means researchers can increase the strength and ductility of a high-entropy alloy at the same time.

The new findings help explain many recent findings whose mechanisms are under debate and guide the development of new strong, yet ductile metals and ceramics.

—Professor Yang

In the experiments, the research team first characterized the lattice strains in the high-entropy alloy FeCoCrNiMn using techniques such as geometric phase analysis (GPA) based on high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM). The researchers then performed micropillar compression tests to study how dislocations glide and cross slip in the alloy. Next, the team performed extensive discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) simulations by incorporating the lattice strains measured experimentally.

Fig 4_0

Characterization of dislocation motion in the alloy using discrete dislocation dynamics (DDD) simulations. Photo source: Li, Jia et al.


The experiments showed that the lattice strain not only restricted the dislocation motion, thus improving the yield strength, but also promoted dislocation cross slips to enhance ductility. The findings demonstrated the significant effect of the heterogeneous strain field on the mechanical properties of the alloy. They provide a new perspective to probe the origin of the high strength of high-entropy alloys and open up new avenues for the development of advanced crystalline materials.

The combined efforts of the experiments and computer simulations revealed the physical mechanisms that underpin the strength-ductility synergy observed in the experiments.

The findings of this study provide a fundamental mechanism to overcome the strength-ductility trade-off facing traditional alloys.

—Professor Yang

Resources

  • Li, Jia et al. (2022) “Heterogeneous lattice strain strengthening in severely distorted crystalline solids” PNAS doi: 10.1073/pnas.2200607119

Comments

The comments to this entry are closed.