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Get Free AccessCombinations of high strength and ductility are hard to attain in metals. Exceptions include materials exhibiting twinning-induced plasticity. To understand how the strength-ductility trade-off can be defeated, we apply in situ , and aberration-corrected scanning, transmission electron microscopy to examine deformation mechanisms in the medium-entropy alloy CrCoNi that exhibits one of the highest combinations of strength, ductility and toughness on record. Ab initio modelling suggests that it has negative stacking-fault energy at 0K and high propensity for twinning. With deformation we find that a three-dimensional (3D) hierarchical twin network forms from the activation of three twinning systems. This serves a dual function: conventional twin-boundary (TB) strengthening from blockage of dislocations impinging on TBs, coupled with the 3D twin network which offers pathways for dislocation glide along, and cross-slip between, intersecting TB-matrix interfaces. The stable twin architecture is not disrupted by interfacial dislocation glide, serving as a continuous source of strength, ductility and toughness.
Zijiao Zhang, H. W. Sheng, Zhangjie Wang, Bernd Gludovatz, Ze Zhang, E.P. George, Qian Yu, Scott X. Mao, Robert O. Ritchie (2017). Dislocation mechanisms and 3D twin architectures generate exceptional strength-ductility-toughness combination in CrCoNi medium-entropy alloy. Nature Communications, 8(1), DOI: 10.1038/ncomms14390.
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Type
Article
Year
2017
Authors
9
Datasets
0
Total Files
0
Language
English
Journal
Nature Communications
DOI
10.1038/ncomms14390
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