Microstructural origin of the simultaneous enhancements in strength and ductility of a nitrogen-doped high-entropy alloy
Xiaoxiang Wu, Zhujun Sun, Wenqi Guo, Chang Liu, Yong-Qiang Yan, Yan-Ning Zhang, Yuji Ikeda, Fritz K\"ormann, J\"org Neugebauer, Zhiming Li, Baptiste Gault, Ge Wu

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that nitrogen doping in a high-entropy alloy can simultaneously enhance both strength and ductility by microstructural modifications, revealing new pathways for alloy design.
Contribution
The paper uncovers how nitrogen-induced short-range order and stacking faults contribute to improved mechanical properties in a high-entropy alloy.
Findings
Nitrogen doping increases yield strength by 104%.
Ductility improves by 38% with N addition.
Two-stage strain hardening behavior observed.
Abstract
As one of the most abundant interstitial elements, nitrogen (N) is effective in improving yield strength of metallic materials, due to interstitial solid solution strengthening. Doping N can substantially enhance the yield strength but often leads to a decreased ductility, revealing a strength-ductility trade-off phenomenon. Here, we simultaneously enhance the strength and ductility in a non-equiatomic CrMnFeCoNi high-entropy alloy via N alloying and unravel the underlying microscopic mechanisms. The N-doped alloy (1 at.% N) shows an excellent combination of higher yield strength (104% increase) and larger ductility (38% increase), with a two-stage strain hardening behavior, compared to the N-free alloy. Detailed transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis reveals that N-doping introduces short-range order (SRO) domains within the microstructure, leads to pronounced planar slip, and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh Entropy Alloys Studies · Additive Manufacturing Materials and Processes · Intermetallics and Advanced Alloy Properties
