| Literature DB >> 30467166 |
T Yang1,2, Y L Zhao2, Y Tong2, Z B Jiao3, J Wei2, J X Cai4, X D Han4, D Chen2, A Hu2, J J Kai2, K Lu5, Y Liu6, C T Liu7,2.
Abstract
Alloy design based on single-principal-element systems has approached its limit for performance enhancements. A substantial increase in strength up to gigapascal levels typically causes the premature failure of materials with reduced ductility. Here, we report a strategy to break this trade-off by controllably introducing high-density ductile multicomponent intermetallic nanoparticles (MCINPs) in complex alloy systems. Distinct from the intermetallic-induced embrittlement under conventional wisdom, such MCINP-strengthened alloys exhibit superior strengths of 1.5 gigapascals and ductility as high as 50% in tension at ambient temperature. The plastic instability, a major concern for high-strength materials, can be completely eliminated by generating a distinctive multistage work-hardening behavior, resulting from pronounced dislocation activities and deformation-induced microbands. This MCINP strategy offers a paradigm to develop next-generation materials for structural applications.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30467166 DOI: 10.1126/science.aas8815
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Science ISSN: 0036-8075 Impact factor: 47.728