posted on 2017-01-26, 00:00authored byYu Zou, Jeffrey M. Wheeler, Huan Ma, Philipp Okle, Ralph Spolenak
Metals
with nanometer-scale grains or nanocrystalline metals exhibit
high strengths at ambient conditions, yet their strengths substantially
decrease with increasing temperature, rendering them unsuitable for
usage at high temperatures. Here, we show that a nanocrystalline high-entropy
alloy (HEA) retains an extraordinarily high yield strength over 5
GPa up to 600 °C, 1 order of magnitude higher than that of its
coarse-grained form and 5 times higher than that of its single-crystalline
equivalent. As a result, such nanostructured HEAs reveal strengthening
figures of merit–normalized strength by the shear modulus above
1/50 and strength-to-density ratios above 0.4 MJ/kg, which are substantially
higher than any previously reported values for nanocrystalline metals
in the same homologous temperature range, as well as low strain-rate
sensitivity of ∼0.005. Nanocrystalline HEAs with these properties
represent a new class of nanomaterials for high-stress and high-temperature
applications in aerospace, civilian infrastructure, and energy sectors.