Unlocking ultrastrong high-temperature ceramics: Beyond Equimolar Compositions in High Entropy Nitrides
Traditionally, increasing compositional complexity and chemical diversity of high entropy alloy ceramics whilst maintaining a stable single-phase solid solution has been a primary design strategy for the development of new ceramics. However, only a handful have shown properties that justify the incr...
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Zusammenfassung: | Traditionally, increasing compositional complexity and chemical diversity of
high entropy alloy ceramics whilst maintaining a stable single-phase solid
solution has been a primary design strategy for the development of new
ceramics. However, only a handful have shown properties that justify the
increased alloying content. Here, we unveil a groundbreaking strategy based on
deviation from conventional equimolar composition towards non-equimolar
composition space, enabling tuning the metastability level of the
supersaturated single-phase solid solution. By employing high-temperature
micromechanical testing of refractory metal-based high entropy nitrides, we
found that the activation of an additional strengthening mechanism upon
metastable phase decomposition propels the yield strength of a non-equimolar
nitride at 1000 C to a staggering 6.9 GPa, that is 40 % higher than the most
robust equimolar nitride. We show that the inherent instability triggers the
decomposition of the solid solution with non-equimolar composition at high
temperatures, inducing strengthening due to the coherency stress of a
spinodally modulated structure, combined with the lattice resistance of the
product solid solution phase. In stark contrast, the strength of equimolar
systems, boasting diverse chemical compositions, declines as a function of
temperature due to the weakening of the lattice resistance and the absence of
other strengthening mechanisms. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2310.20441 |