Abstract

Stacking fault energy and twinning stress are thought to be closely correlated. All currently available models predict a monotonous decrease in twinning stress with decreasing stacking fault energy and depart from the assumption that the intrinsic stacking fault energy has a positive value. Opposite to this prediction, for medium- and high-entropy alloys the twinning stress was shown to increase with decreasing SFE. Additionally, for metastable materials, first principles methods predict negative intrinsic stacking fault energy values, whilst experimentally determined values are always positive. In the present communication, it is postulated that the twinning stress scaled by the Burgers vector bridges the difference between intrinsic and experimentally measured stacking fault energy. The assumption is tested for Cu-Al alloys, for pure metals and for medium- and high-entropy alloys and, for the first time, provides a consistent quantitative interpretation of data for both alloys with positive and negative stacking fault energy.

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