Abstract

Stabilization of grain structure is important for nanocrystalline alloys, and grain boundary segregation is a common approach to restrict coarsening. Doping can alter grain boundary structure, with high temperature states such as amorphous complexions being particularly promising for stabilization. Dopant enrichment at grain boundaries may also result in precipitate formation, giving rise to dopant partitioning between these two types of features. The present study elucidates the effect of dopant choice on the retention of amorphous complexions and the stabilization of grain size due to various forms of interfacial segregation in three binary nanocrystalline Al-rich systems, AlMg, AlNi, and AlY as investigated in detail using transmission electron microscopy. Amorphous complexions were retained in AlY even for very slow cooling conditions, suggesting that Y is the most efficient complexion stabilizer. Moreover, this system exhibited the highest number density of nanorod precipitates, reinforcing a recently observed correlation between amorphous complexions and grain boundary precipitation events. The dopant concentration at the grain boundaries in AlY is lower than in the other two systems, although enrichment compared to the matrix is similar, while secondary segregation to nanorod precipitate edges is much stronger in AlY than in AlMg and AlNi. Y is generally observed to be an efficient doping additive, as it stabilizes amorphous features and nanorod precipitates, and leaves very few atoms trapped in the matrix. As a result, all grains in AlY remained nanosized whereas abnormal grain growth occurred in the AlMg and AlNi alloys. The present study demonstrates nanocrystalline stability via simple alloy formulations and fewer dopant elements, which further encourage the usage of bulk nanostructured materials.

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