Unveiling the grain boundary-related effects on the incipient plasticity and dislocation behavior in nanocrystalline CrCoNi medium-entropy alloy

S Sun and Y Yang and CX Han and GX Sun and Y Chen and HX Zong and JJ Hu and S Han and XZ Liao and XD Ding and JS Lian, JOURNAL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY, 127, 98-107 (2022).

DOI: 10.1016/j.jmst.2022.02.041

The incipient plasticity and dislocation behavior in a nanocrystalline (NC) CrCoNi medium-entropy alloy were systematically investigated in terms of pop-in events during instrumental nano-indentation tests. Quantitative statistical analysis and molecular dynamic simulations were performed to reveal the effects of grain boundaries (GBs) on initial stages of plastic deformation. Multiple pop-in events appeared during loading on the NC CrCoNi. The first pop-in that represents the initial yielding was identified to be controlled by dislocation nucleation, which is in sharp contrast to the continuous elastic-plastic transition mediated by GB mechanisms in NC pure metals. This can be attributed to the sluggish kinetics of the chemically complex GBs (CCGBs) in the NC CrCoNi that hinders diffusive GB activities but facilitates dislocation nucleation. Subsequent pop-ins were also found to be closely related to the extra dragging effects im posed by the CCGBs on dislocation propagation in the NC alloy. Moreover, the extremely small grain sizes and the consequent high-volume fraction of GBs in the NC alloy severely restrict the lengths of dislocation source and the radii of dislocation loop, giving rise to a higher critical stress, smaller activation volume and lower pop-in width as compared with its coarse-grained counterpart. These results provide new insights into the onset of nano-plasticity in concentrated multi-principal element alloys. (c) 2022 Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of The editorial office of Journal of Materials Science & Technology.

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