Ductilizing brittle high-entropy alloys via tailoring valence electron concentrations of precipitates by controlled elemental partitioning

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Abstract

High-strength high-entropy alloys (HEAs) reinforced by hard intermetallics generally show a propensity for embrittlement, significantly undercutting their applications. Here we report a strategy to intrinsically toughen strong-yet-brittle HEAs via altering the valence electron concentration (VEC) of precipitates. It was found that a decrease of the VEC of precipitates by Co substitution for Ni atoms effectively destabilizes the brittle hexagonal-ordered precipitate and promotes the formation of ductile cubic-ordered nano-precipitates in Ni–Co–Fe–Cr–Ti system. Benefiting from such a transformation, a fivefold enhancement of tensile elongation (from 7% to 35%) was successfully achieved together with a simultaneously improved strength up to ∼ 1.35 GPa.

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Yang, T., Zhao, Y. L., Liu, W. H., Zhu, J. H., Kai, J. J., & Liu, C. T. (2018). Ductilizing brittle high-entropy alloys via tailoring valence electron concentrations of precipitates by controlled elemental partitioning. Materials Research Letters, 6(10), 600–606. https://doi.org/10.1080/21663831.2018.1518276

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