Effect of serrated grain boundary on tensile and creep properties of a precipitation strengthened high entropy alloy
LEE, Jhuo-Lun
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
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Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
LEE, Jhuo-Lun
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
MURAKAMI, Hideyuki
Research Center for Structural Materials
Department of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering
Research Center for Structural Materials
Department of Nanoscience and Nanoengineering
TSAI, Che-Wei
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
YEH, An-Chou
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
< Réduire
Department of Materials Science and Engineering
High Entropy Materials Center
PhD. Program in Prospective Functional Materials Industry,
Langue
en
Article de revue
Ce document a été publié dans
Science and Technology of Advanced Materials. 2023, vol. 24, n° 1, p. 2158043 (13 p.)
National Institute for Materials Science
Résumé en anglais
In this study, tensile and creep deformation of a high-entropy alloy processed by selective laser melting (SLM) has been investigated; hot ductility drop was identified at first, and the loss of ductility at elevated ...Lire la suite >
In this study, tensile and creep deformation of a high-entropy alloy processed by selective laser melting (SLM) has been investigated; hot ductility drop was identified at first, and the loss of ductility at elevated temperature was associated with intergranular fracture. By modifying the grain boundary morphology from straight to serration, the hot ductility drop issue has been resolved successfully. The serrated grain boundary could be achieved by reducing the cooling rate of solution heat treatment, which allowed the coarsening of L12 structured γ′ precipitates to interfere with mobile grain boundaries, resulting in undulation of the grain boundary morphology. Tensile and creep tests at 650°C were conducted, and serrated grain boundary could render a significant increase in tensile fracture strain and creep rupture life by a factor of 3.5 and 400, respectively. Detailed microstructure analysis has indicated that serrated grain boundary could distribute strains more evenly than that of straight morphology. The underlying mechanism of deformation with grain boundary serration was further demonstrated by molecular dynamic simulation, which has indicated that serrated grain boundaries could reduce local strain concentration and provide resistance against intergranular cracking. This is the first study to tackle the hot ductility drop issue in a high-entropy alloy fabricated by SLM; it can provide a guideline to develop future high-entropy alloys and design post heat treatment for elevated temperature applications.< Réduire
Mots clés en anglais
Selective laser melting
high-entropy alloys
hot ductility drops
tensile creep properties
serrated grain boundary
Origine
Importé de halUnités de recherche