Abstract

In this paper, cold rolling (55% reduction in thickness) plus different annealing temperatures were performed on the as-cast TiZrHfTa0.5 metastable refractory high-entropy alloy. The most bcc → hcp phase transition was found in the cold-rolled plus 870 °C-annealed specimens (average grain size of ∼ 30 μm), which exhibit the lowest coefficient of frictions (0.12–0.15) and wear rates ((4.08–9.68) × 10−5 mm3/N m) under the dry-sliding loads of 16 N to 64 N at room temperature, relative to the as-cast and cold-rolled specimens with lower annealing temperatures. Atomic-scale observations revealed that composition-segregated bcc → hcp phase transition is further activated in the self-organized gradient worn subsurface, where the dual-phase structure with increased hcp phase fraction continues accommodating the repeated sliding-caused plasticity. Accordingly, two kinds of atomic movement mechanisms of bcc → hcp phase transition were dissected to be mainly executed by the cooperation of atom shuffling or/and partial dislocation dipoles gliding.

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