Abstract

To understand the redistribution of alloying elements in high entropy alloys under irradiation, a CoCrFeMnNi alloy was irradiated with 1 MeV Kr ions at room temperature and at 500°C, and characterized with atom probe tomography and transmission electron microscopy. At 500°C, Co and Ni were enriched around the interstitial, faulted and perfect, dislocation loops resulted from the ion irradiation. In contrast, no segregation was observed at room temperature. The inverse Kirkendall effect through vacancy flux, as opposed to the interstitial binding mechanism, was the primary underlying process attributing to the observed segregation. In addition, a ring-shaped segregation pattern was observed at the faulted dislocation loops, indicating a non-equilibrium nature of the defect clustering and solute segregation process in CoCrFeMnNi under irradiation at high temperature.

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