Abstract

Interfacial segregation is ubiquitous in mulit-component polycrystalline materials and plays a decisive role in material properties. So far, the discovered solute segregation patterns at special high-symmetry interfaces are usually located at the boundary lines or are distributed symmetrically at the boundaries. Here, in a model Mg-Nd-Mn alloy, we confirm that elastic strain minimization facilitated nonsymmetrical segregation of solutes in four types of linear tilt grain boundaries (TGBs) to generate ordered interfacial superstructures. Aberration-corrected high-angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy observations indicate that the solutes selectively segregate at substitutional sites at the linear TGBs separated by periodic misfit dislocations to form such two-dimensional planar structures. These findings are totally different from the classical McLean-type segregation which has assumed the monolayer or submonolayer coverage of a grain boundary and refresh understanding on strain-driven interface segregation behaviors.

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