J. Mater. Sci. Technol. ›› 2022, Vol. 106: 1-9.DOI: 10.1016/j.jmst.2021.08.009

• Research Article •     Next Articles

Ultra-strong and thermally stable nanocrystalline CrCoNi alloy

Peng Gaoa,1, Shuo Sunb,1, Heng Lia,b, Ranming Niua, Shuang Hanb,*(), Hongxiang Zongc, Hao Wanga, Jianshe Lianb, Xiaozhou Liaoa,*()   

  1. aSchool of Aerospace, Mechanical & Mechatronic Engineering, The University of Sydney, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
    bKey Laboratory of Automobile Materials, Ministry of Education, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Jilin University, Changchun 130025, China
    cState Key Laboratory for Mechanical Behavior of Materials, Xi’an Jiaotong University, Xi’an 710049, China
  • Received:2021-06-18 Revised:2021-08-08 Accepted:2021-08-11 Published:2022-04-20 Online:2021-09-25
  • Contact: Shuang Han,Xiaozhou Liao
  • About author:xiaozhou.liao@sydney.edu.au (X. Liao).
    *E-mail addresses: shuanghan@jlu.edu.cn (S. Han),
    First author contact:

    1These authors contributed equally to this work.

Abstract:

Grain refinement to the nanocrystalline regime is the most effective way to strengthen materials but this often deteriorates the grain-size thermal stability and plasticity. Here we manufactured a nanocrystalline face centred cubic CrCoNi medium entropy alloy with columnar grains via magnetron sputtering. Compression of CrCoNi pillars with diameters of - 1 µm revealed a record high yield strength of -5 GPa for pillars with face centred cubic structures and engineering plastic strain of > 30%. The alloy possessed an outstanding grain-size thermal stability even at 1073 K. Both nanocrystalline grain size and a high density of nanotwins/stacking faults are critical to the exceptional yield strength. Deformation twinning, grains refinement during deformation, grain boundary sliding and random grain orientation all contribute to the large plasticity. The outstanding thermal stability is attributed to the sluggish diffusion effect and the low energy of twin boundaries.

Key words: Medium entropy alloy, CrCoNi, Nanocrystalline, In-situ microscopy, Mechanical properties, Thermal stability