Abstract

Grain-boundary (GB) precipitation has a significant adverse effect on plasticity of alloys, which easily leads to catastrophic intergranular failure in safety-critical applications under high external loading. Herein, we report a novel strategy that uses the local stress concentration induced by GB precipitates as a driving force to trigger phase transformation of preset non-equiatomic high-entropy solid-solution phase at GBs. This in situ deformation-induced phase transformation at GBs introduces a well-known effect: transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP), which enables an exceptional elongation to fracture (above 38 %) at a high strength (above 1.5 GPa) in a GB precipitation-hardened high-entropy alloy (HEA). The present strategy in terms of “local stress concentration-induced phase transformations at GBs” may provide a fundamental approach by taking advantage of (rather than avoiding) the GB precipitation to gain a superior combination of high strength and high ductility in HEAs.

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