Abstract
Phase transformation changes numerous properties of materials. Ti–Pt alloys have received much interest because of high martensitic transformation temperature. However, the intrinsic brittleness of these intermetallic compounds with low crystal symmetry and complicated phase structure limit their applications, especially when composition deviates from stoichiometry ratio. By performing in situ heating high-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy experiment and micro-mechanical testing on Ti-35 at% Pt that contained majorly Ti3Pt and αTiPt phases, it was found that precipitating herringbone twinned αTiPt islands within Ti3Pt could occur upon heating, significantly refining mixed-phase structure. The refinement of multi-intermetallic mixed-phase structure endowed brittle material with remarkable capacity for plastic deformation and strain hardening. The plastic deformation mechanisms include phase transformation upon yielding and dislocation slips during hardening, which rarely occurs in intermetallic compounds with low symmetry. The strong interaction between different deformation modes even caused nano-crystallization along slip bands. The results demonstrate that brittle-to-ductile transition in intermetallic compounds can be achieved by tuning mixed-phase structure through phase transformations.
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