Abstract

Nb alloy has become a promising material in aerospace due to high melting point, low density and excellent processing properties. Nevertheless, the mismatched mechanical properties and thermal stability of single-phase BCC-Nb made the aircraft unable to resist cyclic vibration loads under the action of heat/force/flow. Here, after solid solution, quenching and two-stage aging, an FCC/BCC dual-phase Nb alloy with a discontinuous grain boundary (GB) carbide network skeleton was formed. The results show that interstitial C atoms precipitate from BCC-Nb matrix resulting in volume shrinkage and form discontinuous carbide at GB, which stimulates the phase transition of BCC expansion to FCC near GB. Wherein, discontinuous GB carbides help pin the GB and dislocations, impede grain growth, and change the deformation from local to the entire network skeleton. Meanwhile, the gap provides a channel for the dislocation to pass through the GB. Additionally, the FCC provides the multi-slip system to transfer the dislocation. The results show that the yield strength, tensile strength, elongation, fracture toughness and elastic modulus of Nb alloy are increased by 79.99 %, 34.52 %, 164.22 %, 204.76 % and 1.27 %, respectively. This unique microstructure is expected to guide the design of the next generation of high-performance Nb alloys.

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