Abstract
Ti-Zr-Nb-Ta-Mo refractory multi-principal element alloys typically exhibit high yield strength while tensile ductility tends to be poor. In this study, we found that even after solid solution treatment of Ti-Zr-Nb-Ta-Mo alloys, significant change in ductility occur due to the local chemical fluctuations. Ta's dramatic chemical fluctuations cause variations in atomic-scale strain fields, leading to reduced grain boundary strength and brittle fracture. First-principles calculations show that (Ti, Zr)-rich at the grain boundaries increases the delocalization of valence electrons, leading to longer bond lengths and reduced crystal orbital bond index values, thereby causing grain boundary embrittlement. Our findings explore the root causes of brittleness in Ti-Zr-Nb-Ta-Mo alloys at the atomic and electronic scales, providing not only a method to analyze grain boundary embrittlement using bond length, electronic localization function and crystal orbital bond index, but also a theoretical guidance for improving the mechanical properties via grain boundary structure optimization.
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