Unraveling the two-stage precipitation mechanism in a hierarchical-structured fcc/L21 high-entropy alloy: Experiments and analytical modeling

W. Li, W. Wang*, M.C. Niu, K. Yang, J.H. Luan, H.W. Zhang*, Z.B. Jiao*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Journal Publications and ReviewsRGC 21 - Publication in refereed journalpeer-review

38 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Understanding the phase stability and precipitation mechanisms is crucial for engineering multiphase nanostructured alloys with optimal mechanical properties. In this work, we studied the formation and temporal evolution of nanoprecipitates and their effect on mechanical properties of an fcc/L21 eutectic high-entropy alloy through a combination of experiments and analytical modeling. Aging the alloy at 1023 K results in the precipitation of coherent L12 nanoparticles in the fcc phase and coherent bcc nanoparticles in the L21 phase, leading to the formation of an fcc/L12 + L21/bcc hierarchical structure. Notably, the scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) results reveal that the precipitation in both the fcc and L21 phases is not through a one-step nucleation, but a two-stage transformation consisting of an initial chemical separation via spinodal decomposition and subsequent structural ordering/disordering. The Gibbs free energy diagrams of the fcc and L21 phases were modeled through numerical techniques, and the spinodal decomposition regions of the two systems at different temperatures were calculated. Based on the modeling results, we discussed the phase stability and thermodynamics of spinodal decomposition of the two phases. In addition, the formation of hierarchical structure substantially enhances the strength of the alloy. Modeling of the strengthening mechanisms reveals that the order strengthening of L12 nanoparticles plays a major role in enhancing the yield strength of the alloy, whereas the contribution from the bcc nanoparticles can be negligible. Our findings provide insights into the phase stability, precipitation and strengthening mechanisms of hierarchical-structured alloys. © 2023 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd.
Original languageEnglish
Article number119426
JournalActa Materialia
Volume262
Online published10 Oct 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Jan 2024

Funding

Z.B.J. acknowledges the financial support from National Natural Science Foundation of China (52171162), Research Grants Council of Hong Kong (ECS 25202719, GRF 15227121, C1017–21GF, and C1020–21GF), Shenzhen Science and Technology Program (JCYJ20210324142203009), Research Institute for Advanced Manufacturing Fund (P0041364 and P0046108), and PolyU Fund (P0038814, P0039624, P0042933, and P0043467). W.W. acknowledges the financial support from National Natural Science Foundation of China (52271122). H.W.Z. acknowledges the financial support from Liaoning Key Research and Development Program (2022JH2/101300080), the Chinese Academy of Sciences (ZDBS-LY-JSC023), the IMR Innovation Fund (2023-PY16), the National Natural Science Foundation of Liaoning Province (2023-BS-012). The authors thank Dr. Kamalnath Kadirvel for providing the scripts for Hessian calculation and eigenvalue/eigenvector analysis.

Research Keywords

  • High-entropy alloy
  • Precipitation
  • Spinodal decomposition
  • Strengthening mechanism

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