Thermal super-jogs control high-temperature strength in Nb-Mo-Ta-W alloys
Sicong He, Xinran Zhou, Dan Mordehai, Jaime Marian

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new mechanism involving super-jogs formed by vacancies at dislocation cores, explaining the high-temperature strength of Nb-Mo-Ta-W alloys through a combination of chemical complexity and dislocation dynamics.
Contribution
It proposes a novel model linking chemical fluctuations to vacancy formation and super-jog formation, enhancing understanding of high-temperature strength in refractory alloys.
Findings
The model accurately predicts the temperature-dependent strength of Nb-Mo-Ta-W alloys.
Vacancy-induced super-jogs significantly increase dislocation pinning at high temperatures.
The proposed mechanism aligns well with experimental data across various refractory alloys.
Abstract
Refractory multi-element alloys (RMEA) with body-centered cubic (bcc) structure have been the object of much research over the last decade due to their high potential as candidate materials for high-temperature applications. Most of these alloys display a remarkable strength at high temperatures, which cannot be explained by the standard model of bcc plasticity dominated by thermally-activated screw dislocation motion. Recent research on Nb-Mo-Ta-W alloys points to a heightened role of edge dislocations on deformation, which is generally attributed to atomic-level chemical fluctuations in the material and their interactions with dislocation cores during slip. However, while this model accounts for a strengthening effect due to the chemical complexity of the alloy, it is not sufficient to explain its strength across the entire thermal range. Here we propose a new mechanism that captures…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntermetallics and Advanced Alloy Properties · Advanced Materials Characterization Techniques · High Temperature Alloys and Creep
