Abstract

Maraging structural materials have been traditionally indicated as essential metallic alloys for hundreds of years. The highest strength of the aged martensite alloys requires the formation of high nanoprecipitate density; however, it often results in insufficient ductility (< ∼12%) which limits their application. Here, we describe how these alloys obtain enhanced ductility at high strength by injecting reversion-induced metastable austenite into the brittle microstructure, in which we develop a novel dual-phase medium-entropy Fe68Ni10Mn10Co10Ti1.5Si0.5 (at%) maraging alloys with a strength of 1.6 GPa and ductility of ∼25%. Generating the large fraction of austenite metastability with a chemical core-shell microstructure during a simple process of reversion drives profuse heterogeneities at chemical and structural states, including additional precipitation strengthening and transformation-induced plasticity effect. The combined metastability and heterogeneity, realized with heat-treatment techniques that are accessible processing routes in a wide range of academic and industrial applications, can provide a breakthrough to develop sustainable maraging materials with large ductility.

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