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Investigating the deformation mechanisms of a highly metastable high entropy alloy using in-situ neutron diffraction...

Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Materials Today Communications
Publication Date
Page Number
100858
Volume
23

The present study correlates the effect of enhanced metastability on both the well-understood γ-f.c.c. stacking fault energy (SFE) and deformation mechanisms in the ε-h.c.p. phase of a metastable high entropy alloy (HEA). The SFE of a Fe40Mn20Cr15Co20Si5 alloy (CS-HEA) was experimentally determined to be ∼6.31 mJ m−2 using in-situ neutron diffraction. The relatively low-measured SFE of the CS-HEA results in a high fraction of the ε-h.c.p. phase (58 %) triggering significant stress partitioning to ε-h.c.p. and a marginal fraction of γ-f.c.c. → ε-h.c.p. transformation (∼25 %). The ε-h.c.p. phase accommodated a significant amount of strain marked by the large stress-induced decrease of c/a ratio (from ∼1.619 to 1.588), which was accompanied by activation of non-basal deformation modes, such as deformation twinning and pyramidal slip. Using in-situ neutron diffraction, we show by decreasing SFE and stabilization of large fractions of ε-h.c.p., activation of non-basal deformation modes are responsible for high work hardenability in absence of significant γ-f.c.c. → ε-h.c.p. transformation.