4.8 Article

Uniting tensile ductility with ultrahigh strength via composition undulation

Journal

NATURE
Volume 604, Issue 7905, Pages 273-+

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-022-04459-w

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [51931004, 51601067, 52171011, 51571120, 51604156, 91963112]
  2. 111 Project 2.0 [BP2018008]
  3. Science and Technology Development Program of Jilin Province [20160520007JH]
  4. Program for JLU Science and Technology Innovative Research Team (JLUSTIRT) [2017TD-09]
  5. Australian Research Council [DP190102243]
  6. Microscopy Australia node at the University of Sydney (Sydney Microscopy Microanalysis)
  7. DOE Office of Science [DE-AC02-06CH11357]

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Nanocrystalline nickel-cobalt solid solutions achieve high strength and ductility through compositional undulation, which slows down dislocation motion, promotes dislocation interaction and accumulation, enhances strain hardening, and stabilizes tensile flow.
Metals with nanocrystalline grains have ultrahigh strengths approaching two gigapascals. However, such extreme grain-boundary strengthening results in the loss of almost all tensile ductility, even when the metal has a face-centred-cubic structure-the most ductile of all crystal structures(1-3). Here we demonstrate that nanocrystalline nickel-cobalt solid solutions, although still a face-centred-cubic single phase, show tensile strengths of about 2.3 gigapascals with a respectable ductility of about 16 per cent elongation to failure. This unusual combination of tensile strength and ductility is achieved by compositional undulation in a highly concentrated solid solution. The undulation renders the stacking fault energy and the lattice strains spatially varying over length scales in the range of one to ten nanometres, such that the motion of dislocations is thus significantly affected. The motion of dislocations becomes sluggish, promoting their interaction, interlocking and accumulation, despite the severely limited space inside the nanocrystalline grains. As a result, the flow stress is increased, and the dislocation storage is promoted at the same time, which increases the strain hardening and hence the ductility. Meanwhile, the segment detrapping along the dislocation line entails a small activation volume and hence an increased strain-rate sensitivity, which also stabilizes the tensile flow. As such, an undulating landscape resisting dislocation propagation provides a strengthening mechanism that preserves tensile ductility at high flow stresses.

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