TY - JOUR
T1 - Strategic control of precipitate architecture and ultrafine grain-boundary engineering for enhanced mechanical performance in L12-strengthened FCC-type multi-principal element alloys
AU - Wu, Jiafeng
AU - Cui, Zhenlu
AU - Han, Xiaoliang
AU - Wang, Ruixin
AU - Chen, Zhiwei
AU - Liu, Qi
AU - Xie, Chaoyu
AU - Gong, Jianhong
AU - Cao, Chongde
AU - Wang, Hui
AU - Umetsu, Rie Y.
AU - Song, Kaikai
AU - Li, Ran
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2025/11
Y1 - 2025/11
N2 - Multi-principal element alloys (MPEAs) offer exceptional mechanical properties for structural applications, yet their microstructural complexity poses challenges in optimizing performance. This study investigates the impact of initial microstructures—homogenized equiaxed grains (EG) with dot-like L12 nanoprecipitates versus as-cast columnar grains (CG) with rod-like L12 nanoprecipitates—on the mechanical behavior of Ni40Co35Cr15Al5Ti5 MPEAs under identical thermomechanical processing. The processed EG samples develop a bimodal grain structure, comprising ultrafine recrystallized and coarse unrecrystallized grains. Detailed analysis reveals that coherent L12 nanoprecipitates predominantly form within unrecrystallized regions, while recrystallized grains contain both continuous and discontinuous L12 nanoprecipitates, alongside submicron semi-coherent L12 particles at grain boundaries (GBs). Particularly, Lamellar L12 precipitates in the recrystallized-unrecrystallized transition zone initiate microcracks, compromising strength-ductility synergy. Conversely, the processed CG samples exhibit a uniform ultrafine-grained matrix with comparable L12 precipitation but spatially modulated distributions, enhancing plastic deformation through stacking faults, Lomer-Cottrell locks, and distorted 9R structures near annealing twins. Submicron L12 particles at GBs impede crack propagation, resulting in superior mechanical properties: an ultimate tensile strength of ∼1833 MPa and a total elongation of ∼14.8 %. This study reveals the strategic control of initial microstructures and thermomechanical processing to optimize grain refinement and L12 phase precipitation, advancing the development of high-performance structural materials.
AB - Multi-principal element alloys (MPEAs) offer exceptional mechanical properties for structural applications, yet their microstructural complexity poses challenges in optimizing performance. This study investigates the impact of initial microstructures—homogenized equiaxed grains (EG) with dot-like L12 nanoprecipitates versus as-cast columnar grains (CG) with rod-like L12 nanoprecipitates—on the mechanical behavior of Ni40Co35Cr15Al5Ti5 MPEAs under identical thermomechanical processing. The processed EG samples develop a bimodal grain structure, comprising ultrafine recrystallized and coarse unrecrystallized grains. Detailed analysis reveals that coherent L12 nanoprecipitates predominantly form within unrecrystallized regions, while recrystallized grains contain both continuous and discontinuous L12 nanoprecipitates, alongside submicron semi-coherent L12 particles at grain boundaries (GBs). Particularly, Lamellar L12 precipitates in the recrystallized-unrecrystallized transition zone initiate microcracks, compromising strength-ductility synergy. Conversely, the processed CG samples exhibit a uniform ultrafine-grained matrix with comparable L12 precipitation but spatially modulated distributions, enhancing plastic deformation through stacking faults, Lomer-Cottrell locks, and distorted 9R structures near annealing twins. Submicron L12 particles at GBs impede crack propagation, resulting in superior mechanical properties: an ultimate tensile strength of ∼1833 MPa and a total elongation of ∼14.8 %. This study reveals the strategic control of initial microstructures and thermomechanical processing to optimize grain refinement and L12 phase precipitation, advancing the development of high-performance structural materials.
KW - 9R phase
KW - Grain-boundary engineering
KW - Mechanical properties
KW - Multi-principal element alloys
KW - Precipitation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105016308670
U2 - 10.1016/j.msea.2025.149161
DO - 10.1016/j.msea.2025.149161
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105016308670
SN - 0921-5093
VL - 946
JO - Materials Science and Engineering: A
JF - Materials Science and Engineering: A
M1 - 149161
ER -