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Twinning engineering of high-entropy alloys: An...
Journal article

Twinning engineering of high-entropy alloys: An exercise in process optimization and modeling

Abstract

In a bid to improve the mechanical properties of high-entropy alloys, particularly, their strain hardening capability, we adapted the time-proven concept of ‘twinning engineering’, developed in the context of TWIP steels, to twinning-assisted high-entropy materials. The strategy chosen involved a two-step thermomechanical processing that consisted of low-temperature pre-straining and subsequent annealing. This approach was trialled on CoCrFeMnNi as an exemplary high-entropy alloy. The annealing conditions selected ensured that the deformation twins generated under low-temperature deformation were retained, whilst the dislocation density was recovered. The viability of this strategy was convincingly confirmed for room temperature deformation of the alloy. A constitutive model accounting for the effect of the pre-straining induced deformation twins was proposed. It was shown to provide a reliable description of the low-temperature and room-temperature deformation behavior of CoCrFeMnNi when deformation twins are involved.

Authors

Moon J; Bouaziz O; Kim HS; Estrin Y

Journal

Materials Science and Engineering A, Vol. 822, ,

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

August 3, 2021

DOI

10.1016/j.msea.2021.141681

ISSN

0921-5093

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