Abstract

High-entropy alloys (HEAs) are nearly equimolar multi-principal element alloys, exhibiting exceptional thermal and mechanical properties at extreme conditions such as high-temperatures and stresses. Since the first discovery and early conceptualization of conventional HEAs nearly two decades ago, HEAs with far-from-equimolar compositions have attracted substantial interest to provide a broader range of material properties and to adjust price fluctuations and availability of commodities. Here, we present a first-principles investigation of non-equimolar chromium-manganese-iron-cobalt-nickel (CrMnFeCoNi) HEAs and effects of molybdenum (Mo) and niobium (Nb) substitutions on cost, phase stability and solubility, and mechanical and thermal performance up to 1000 K operational temperature. Virtual-crystal approximation is used to expediently approximate random solid solutions at the disordered mean-field limit. Using multi-objective metaheuristics built on a first-principles database, golden compositions are predicted for thermally well-insulated components and effective heat sinks. Replacing Co with Fe lowers commodity costs without hindering phase stability and solubility. Lower Ni concentration leads to lower thermal conductivity, indicating better thermal insulation, while reducing Mn concentration significantly increases the thermal conductivity, indicating better performing heat sinks. Moving away from equimolar ratios commonly increases the thermal expansion coefficient, which could generate higher thermal stresses. Nb and Mo substitution always lead to substantially higher commodity cost and density but with an increment in the mechanical performance due to solid-solution hardening. However, alloying with Mo and Nb is the only compositional space that reduces the thermal conductivity and thermal expansion coefficient.

Highlights

  • High-entropy alloys (HEAs) are single-phase multi-principal element alloys exhibiting solid solution and are conventionally mixed with equimolar fractions (Chen et al, 2018)

  • We start with relative phase stability and solubility of nonequimolar HEAs with respect to the reference system (X5)

  • We found that the solubility figures of merits (FOMs) and mechanical properties have commonly weak temperature dependence while thermal properties exhibited significant temperature dependence

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Summary

Introduction

High-entropy alloys (HEAs) are single-phase multi-principal element alloys exhibiting solid solution and are conventionally mixed with equimolar fractions (Chen et al, 2018). Non-equimolar HEAs provide a broad compositional space for multi-objective materials design for diverse engineering applications for extreme conditions such as aerospace (Dada et al, 2021a), nuclear reactors (Tong et al, 2005), and biomedical (Varalakshmi et al, 2010) applications. In such applications, conventional alloys commonly have severe limitations to achieve more cost-effective, long-living, and more green designs (Dada et al, 2021b). Low Co non-equimolar HEAs are an appealing system for diverse applications and the replacement of high-strength steel components (Li et al, 2022)

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