New Strategy in Light-Weight and Ultrastrong Ti40nb15mo30(Nbc)15 Refractory Complex Concentrated Alloy

42 Pages Posted: 29 Feb 2024

See all articles by Weihang Lu

Weihang Lu

Harbin Institute of Technology

Dong Liu

University of Oxford

Cunyu Wang

Harbin Institute of Technology

Qi An

Harbin Institute of Technology

Robert O. Ritchie

University of California, Berkeley - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab); University of California, Berkeley - Department of Materials Science and Engineering

L.J. Huang

Harbin Institute of Technology

Shenbao Jin

Hebei University of Technology

Naonao Gao

Harbin Institute of Technology

Liangbo Sun

Harbin Institute of Technology

Lin Geng

Harbin Institute of Technology

Abstract

Traditional refractory high-entropy alloys (RHEAs) generally exhibit a trade-off between high-temperature strength and light weight. In present work, a novel design strategy based on tailoring element distribution is proposed to achieve excellent high-temperature strength at a density lower than 7 g·cm-3. Specifically, a Ti40Nb15Mo30(NbC)15 composite was designed and prepared by powder metallurgy. The composite is found to be composed of two ultrafine-grained (UFG) phases including a body-centered cubic (bcc) solid-solution phase and a face-centered cubic (fcc) ceramic reinforcement phase (Ti, Nb)C. The as-sintered composite shows a uniform and UFG microstructure where two phases are interconnected. Due to this unique microstructure, the Ti40Nb15Mo30(NbC)15 composite displays the highest specific yield strengths among the surveyed RHEAs, complex concentrated alloys, and metal-matrix composites from 800℃ (243 MPa·g-1·cm3) to 1000℃ (127 MPa·g-1·cm3). The outstanding high-temperature compressive strength was found to be associated with high resistance to dislocation motion and strong dislocation interactions in both the bcc and fcc phases. The phase interface after hot compression remained semi-coherent, vindicating its high stability. The high-density of stable phase interfaces not only retards the dislocation motion due to the large image force near the phase boundary but also induces a high value of activation energy for diffusion. The high activation energy can further achieve significant microstructure stability even after a long-term annealing (36 h) at 1000℃. This work provides new perspectives for the design and application of light and ultrastrong refractory complex concentrated alloys (RCCAs) by comparison to the insufficient strength of many traditional and light RCCAs.

Keywords: refractory complex concentrated alloy, high-temperature strength, light weight, microstructure stability

Suggested Citation

Lu, Weihang and Liu, Dong and Wang, Cunyu and An, Qi and Ritchie, Robert O. and Huang, L.J. and Jin, Shenbao and Gao, Naonao and Sun, Liangbo and Geng, Lin, New Strategy in Light-Weight and Ultrastrong Ti40nb15mo30(Nbc)15 Refractory Complex Concentrated Alloy. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4743607 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4743607

Weihang Lu

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

Dong Liu

University of Oxford ( email )

Mansfield Road
Oxford, OX1 4AU
United Kingdom

Cunyu Wang

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

Qi An

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

Robert O. Ritchie

University of California, Berkeley - Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) ( email )

University of California, Berkeley - Department of Materials Science and Engineering ( email )

Berkeley, CA
United States

L.J. Huang (Contact Author)

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

Shenbao Jin

Hebei University of Technology ( email )

Tianjin
China

Naonao Gao

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

Liangbo Sun

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

Lin Geng

Harbin Institute of Technology ( email )

92 West Dazhi Street
Nan Gang District
Harbin, 150001
China

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