January 15, 2021
Journal Article

Co-introduction of precipitate hardening and TRIP in a TWIP high-entropy alloy using friction stir alloying

Abstract

Tuning deformation mechanisms is imperative to overcome the well-known strength-ductility paradigm. Twinning-induced plasticity (TWIP), transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) and precipitate hardening have been investigated separately and have been altered to achieve exceptional strength or ductility in several alloy systems. In this study, we use a novel solid-state alloying method—friction stir alloying (FSA)—to tune the microstructure, and a composition of a TWIP high-entropy alloy by adding Ti, and thus activating site-specific deformation mechanisms that occur concomitantly in a single alloy. During the FSA process, grains of the as-cast face-centered cubic matrix were refined by high-temperature severe plastic deformation and, subsequently, a new alloy composition was obtained by dissolving Ti into the matrix. After annealing the FSA specimen at 900 °C, hard Ni–Ti rich precipitates formed to strengthen the alloy. An additional result was a Ni-depleted region in the vicinity of newly-formed precipitates. The reduction in Ni locally reduced the stacking fault energy, thus inducing TRIP-based deformation while the remaining matrix still deformed as a result of TWIP. Our current approach presents a novel microstructural architecture to design alloys, an approach that combines and optimizes local compositions such that multiple deformation mechanisms can be activated to enhance engineering properties.

Revised: February 25, 2021 | Published: January 15, 2021

Citation

Wang T., S. Shukla, B. Gwalani, S. Sinha, S. Thapliyal, M. Frank, and R.S. Mishra. 2021. Co-introduction of precipitate hardening and TRIP in a TWIP high-entropy alloy using friction stir alloying. Scientific Reports 11, no. 1:Article No.1579. PNNL-SA-159159. doi:10.1038/s41598-021-81350-0

Research topics