Nonmetallic Trace Elements X (X = H, C, N, O, B and S) Induced Rhenium Co-Segregation in Nickel Σ5 [001](210) Symmetrical Tilt Grain Boundary

23 Pages Posted: 21 Feb 2023

See all articles by Hong-Tao Xue

Hong-Tao Xue

Lanzhou University of Technology - State Key Laboratory of Advanced Processing and Recycling of Nonferrous Metals

Ruidong Dang

Lanzhou University of Technology

Fu-Ling Tang

Lanzhou University of Technology

Xue-Feng Lu

Lanzhou University of Technology - State Key Laboratory of Advanced Processing and Recycling of Nonferrous Metals

Junqiang Ren

Lanzhou University of Technology

Jun-Chen Li

Lanzhou University of Technology - State Key Laboratory of Advanced Processing and Recycling of Nonferrous Metals

Multiple version iconThere are 2 versions of this paper

Abstract

The thermally/mechanically-driven structural instability of nano- and coarse-grained polycrystalline metals originates from the unstable grain boundaries (GBs). GB segregation of solute elements could not only stabilize but also embrittle GBs. To improve GB stability and cohesion in parallel via solute segregations, in this work the segregation behavior of six non-metallic impurities X at the Σ5 [001](210) GB of nickel-based alloys, their co-segregations with Re element that has no GB segregation tendency, and segregation-induced changes in GB properties were investigated comprehensively from first-principles calculations. We discovered that these nonmetallic elements can segregate to the Ni GB and thus stabilize it, but they are GB embrittlers except B. Annealing temperature and bulk concentration have no effect on the S segregation. With the X pre-segregations, induced GB segregations of Re were observed, which lowers the excess energy and enhances the cohesive strength of all X-segregated GBs. The attractive interactions between C/N/B and Re atoms promote the Re segregation. The stabilizing and strengthening mechanisms of Re segregation were mainly attributed to the changes in Fermi level location and the increased interplanar bonding, respectively. Our findings may gain more insights into the atomic-scale GB co-segregations and stabilization of nano- and coarse-grained Ni-based alloys.

Keywords: Induced grain boundary segregation, Σ5 [001](210) symmetrical tilt grain boundary, Grain boundary excess energy, Grain boundary strengthening, First-principles Calculations, Nanograined Ni alloys

Suggested Citation

Xue, Hong-Tao and Dang, Ruidong and Tang, Fu-Ling and Lu, Xue-Feng and Ren, Junqiang and Li, Jun-Chen, Nonmetallic Trace Elements X (X = H, C, N, O, B and S) Induced Rhenium Co-Segregation in Nickel Σ5 [001](210) Symmetrical Tilt Grain Boundary. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4365826 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4365826

Hong-Tao Xue

Lanzhou University of Technology - State Key Laboratory of Advanced Processing and Recycling of Nonferrous Metals ( email )

Lanzhou, 730050
China

Ruidong Dang

Lanzhou University of Technology ( email )

Lanzhou
China

Fu-Ling Tang (Contact Author)

Lanzhou University of Technology ( email )

Lanzhou
China

Xue-Feng Lu

Lanzhou University of Technology - State Key Laboratory of Advanced Processing and Recycling of Nonferrous Metals ( email )

Lanzhou, 730050
China

Junqiang Ren

Lanzhou University of Technology ( email )

Lanzhou
China

Jun-Chen Li

Lanzhou University of Technology - State Key Laboratory of Advanced Processing and Recycling of Nonferrous Metals ( email )

Lanzhou, 730050
China

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
10
Abstract Views
149
PlumX Metrics