Inoculating solid-state homogeneous precipitation by impurity atoms through a spinodal decomposition like pathway
Shiwei Pan, Chunan Li, Hanne-Sofie S{\o}reide, Dongdong Zhao,, Constantinos Hatzoglou, Feng Qian, Long-Qing Chen, Yanjun Li

TL;DR
This paper introduces a novel impurity atom inoculation strategy in solid-state alloys that transforms the precipitation pathway, significantly enhancing precipitate density and strengthening efficiency in Al-Zr alloys.
Contribution
It demonstrates a new nonclassical nucleation pathway induced by impurity atoms, leading to improved precipitation kinetics and material strengthening.
Findings
Impurity atoms like Sn, Sb, Bi, Cd, and Si enhance Zr diffusivity.
Precipitation shifts from classical to spinodal decomposition-like pathway.
Record high hardening efficiency achieved in Al-Zr alloys.
Abstract
Solid-state homogeneous precipitation of nano-sized precipitates is one of the most effective processes to strengthen metal alloys, where the final density and size distribution of precipitates are largely controlled by the precipitation kinetics. Here, we report a strategy to inoculate the homogeneous precipitation of coherent precipitates to enhance the precipitation strengthening. Using the technologically important dilute Al-Zr alloys as an example, we demonstrate that an addition of a trace level of economical and readily available, non-L1 phase forming impurity atoms, X (X= Sn, Sb, Bi or Cd) and Si, can significantly enhance the diffusivity of Zr atoms and overturn the precipitation of L1-structured AlZr nanoparticles from the classical homogeneous nucleation and growth pathway into a nonclassical nucleation pathway: AlZr forms through the spontaneous…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCatalytic Processes in Materials Science · Semiconductor materials and devices · Ammonia Synthesis and Nitrogen Reduction
