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Obtaining strength-ductility combination in a laser additive manufactured (FeCoNi)86Al7Ti7 high-entropy alloy at cryogenic temperature

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Author(s):
Xie, Kaiqiang ; Fang, Yacheng ; Ma, Pan ; Yang, Hong ; Wan, Shiguang ; Prashanth, Konda Gokuldoss ; Gargarella, Piter ; Mu, Yongkun ; Wang, Gang ; Jia, Yandong
Total Authors: 10
Document type: Journal article
Source: JOURNAL OF MATERIALS RESEARCH AND TECHNOLOGY-JMR&T; v. 34, p. 13-pg., 2024-12-19.
Abstract

High-entropy alloys (HEAs) are known for their distinctive microstructural features, outstanding performance, and potential applications, establishing them as novel metallic materials. Studies indicate that face-centered cubic HEAs generally offer increased strength and toughness at lower temperatures, suitable for cryogenic applications. This work on (FeCoNi)(86)Al7Ti7 HEA fabricated using powder bed fusion (PBF) studies the phase composition, microstructure, and mechanical properties at both room and cryogenic temperatures (298 K and 77 K). The PBF HEA exhibits a hierarchical microstructure with columnar grains, Ti-enriched cellular substructures entangled with high-density dislocations, and L21 nanoprecipitates, contributing to an excellent strength-ductility combination at room temperature. Notably, as the temperature decreases from 298 K to 77 K, both strength and ductility increase, with a higher yield strength of similar to 1.0 GPa, ultimate tensile strength of similar to 1.55 GPa, and ductility of similar to 42%. Dislocation strengthening is dominant at both room and cryogenic temperatures, with dislocation slip as the primary deformation mechanism at 298 K and a combination of dislocation slips and stacking faults at 77 K. (AU)

FAPESP's process: 17/27031-4 - Effect of process parameters on the metallurgical characteristics of additive-manufactured alloys
Grantee:Piter Gargarella
Support Opportunities: Research Grants - Young Investigators Grants