Abstract

Often the experimentally-observed, single-phase high entropy alloy (HEA) is the result of second-phase precipitation constrained by thermodynamic and kinetic factors. Using Al0.3CoCrFeNi as a candidate HEA, this paper demonstrates the strong influence of thermo-mechanical processing on the transformation pathway adopted for isothermal second-phase precipitation. A traditional thermo-mechanical processing route comprised of homogenization cold-rolling solution treatment in the single fcc phase region, followed by a precipitation anneal at a lower temperature, results in a homogeneous distribution of nanometer scale-ordered L12 (gamma prime-like) precipitates within the fcc matrix. In contrast, if cold-rolling is followed directly by annealing at the precipitation temperature, then the resulting microstructural evolution pathway changes completely, with concurrent recrystallization of the matrix fcc grains and precipitation of B2 and sigma phases, largely at the grain boundaries. These experimentally observed variations in transformation pathway have been rationalized via the competition between the thermodynamic driving force and activation barrier for second-phase nucleation in this alloy, coupled with the kinetics of the process. The microstructural variations that result from these dramatically different phase transformation pathways can lead to some rather exceptional mechanical properties that can be varied over a large range even for a single Al0.3CoCrFeNi HEA composition.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call