Advanced superhard composite materials with extremely improved mechanical strength by interfacial segregation of dilute dopants

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Abstract

Control of heterointerfaces in advanced composite materials is of scientific and industrial importance, because their interfacial structures and properties often determine overall performance and reliability of the materials. Here distinct improvement of mechanical properties of alumina-matrix tungsten-carbide composites, which is expected for cutting-tool application for aerospace industries, is achieved via interfacial atomic segregation. It is found that only a small amount of Zr addition is unexpectedly effective to significantly increase their mechanical properties, and especially their bending strength reaches values far beyond those of conventional superhard composite materials. Atomic-resolution STEM observations show that doped Zr atoms are preferentially located only at interfaces between Al2O3 and WC grains, forming atomic segregation layers. DFT calculations indicate favorable thermodynamic stability of the interfacial Zr segregation due to structural transition at the interface. Moreover, theoretical works of separation demonstrate remarkable increase in interfacial strength through the interfacial structural transition, which strongly supports reinforcement of the interfaces by single-layer Zr segregation.

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Nishi, T., Matsunaga, K., Mitsuoka, T., Okimura, Y., & Katsu, Y. (2020). Advanced superhard composite materials with extremely improved mechanical strength by interfacial segregation of dilute dopants. Scientific Reports, 10(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-78064-0

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