Edge dislocations in multi-component solid solution alloys: Beyond traditional elastic depinning
A. Esfandiarpour, S. Papanikolaou, M. Alava

TL;DR
This study uses molecular dynamics simulations to explore dislocation behavior in high-entropy alloys, revealing a new strength regime linked to dislocation roughness and stacking fault widths, which could inform alloy design.
Contribution
It uncovers a novel dislocation depinning regime in high-entropy alloys, highlighting the importance of stacking fault widths and dislocation roughness for alloy strengthening.
Findings
Identification of a new strength regime in HEAs
Correlation between dislocation roughness and stacking fault widths
Analytical models underestimate yield stress in these alloys
Abstract
High-entropy alloys (HEA) form solid solutions with large chemical disorder and excellent mechanical properties. We investigate the origin of HEA strengthening in face-centered cubic (FCC) single-phase HEAs through molecular dynamics simulations of dislocations, in particular, the equiatomic , , , , , and also, , . The dislocation correlation length , roughness amplitude , and stacking fault widths are tracked as a function of stress. All alloys are characterized by a well defined depinning stress () and we find a novel regime where exceptional strength is observed, and a fortuitous combination takes place, of small stacking fault widths and large dislocation roughness . Thus the depinning of two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh Entropy Alloys Studies · High-Temperature Coating Behaviors · Advanced Materials Characterization Techniques
