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High temperature phase stability of the compositionally complex alloy AlMo0.5NbTa0.5TiZr

APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS(2021)

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Abstract
Recently, a class of refractory high-entropy alloys has been developed with a refined microstructure consisting of an ordered B2 matrix with cuboidal BCC precipitates resembling an "inverted superalloy-like" microstructure. In this paper, we have studied the evolution of the duplex microstructure of AlMo0.5NbTa0.5TiZr during aging at elevated temperatures, particularly with regard to the nature of the B2 and BCC phases. Samples were aged at 1000 degrees C for 6 h, followed by a water quench. It was found that while the relative volume fractions of the B2 and BCC phases remained nearly constant after ageing, compositional changes of both the B2 and BCC phases were determined. In the aged condition, there is evidence from high-resolution STEM HAADF imaging that suggests that the B2 phase in the aged condition may undergo a spinodal reaction, with the sub-lattice occupancies differing within the ordered precipitates. A change in size and shape of the BCC precipitates was also noted, and this was accompanied by a difference in the nature of the B2/BCC interfaces. Thus, a step-like B2/BCC interface is evidenced in the aged condition, in contrast with the planar {100} interfaces in the "superalloy-like" microstructure, likely adopted to accommodate a change in coherency resulting from an increase in misfit between the two phases from compositional changes occurring during the coarsening of the BCC precipitates. Published under an exclusive license by AIP Publishing
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Key words
high temperature phase stability,complex alloy
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