Investigation of the Corrosion Electrochemistry of a Ni Based High Entropy Alloy in Chloride Containing Solutions

Abstract High entropy alloys (HEAs) contain five or more alloying elements typically in equimolar concentrations. In contrast, traditional solid solution alloys typically consist of one majority solvent element and several solute elements in comparatively low atomic proportions. HEAs are of interest...

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Veröffentlicht in:Meeting abstracts (Electrochemical Society) 2017-09, Vol.MA2017-02 (11), p.750-750
Hauptverfasser: Gerard, Angela Yu, Quiambao, Kathleen F, Srinivasan, Jayendran, Li, Tianshu, Saal, James, Lu, Pin, Frankel, Gerald S., Scully, John R.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract High entropy alloys (HEAs) contain five or more alloying elements typically in equimolar concentrations. In contrast, traditional solid solution alloys typically consist of one majority solvent element and several solute elements in comparatively low atomic proportions. HEAs are of interest for development of high performance materials particularly corrosion resistant alloys, because they can be engineered to form a single solid solution phase which reduces compositional and microstructural heterogeneity. Several hypotheses have been proposed to explain why HEAs form solid solutions, including a high entropy of mixing, and a near-zero enthalpy of mixing 1 , 2 . Many desired properties have been reported to arise in HEAs such as high hardness, superior wear resistance, high-temperature strength, and structural stability 1 , 2 . Excellent corrosion and oxidation resistance has been proposed but testing is limited 1-3 . HEAs are expected to perform superior to conventional alloys due to their unique combination of elements as well as an increase in the degrees of freedom in design which can be used to regulate the structure and properties of these alloys through alloying process control, and which cannot be achieved in typical binary and ternary systems 3 . This enhanced control over process variables in HEA design enables a systematic scientific examination of the effect alloy composition on corrosion properties, particularly passivity, metastable pitting, and repassivation. Characterization of the protective film formed on the HEA surface will provide an understanding of how alloy composition, microstructure, and oxide properties combine to improve passivity-based corrosion resistance and prevent film breakdown 4 . The focus of this talk will be to investigate alloy passivation as a function of chloride concentrations in an effort to elucidate the mechanism of aqueous corrosion in nickel-based HEAs, with the overarching goal of predictive corrosion-resistant alloy (CRA) design. In the present study a single HEA of composition 33.2Ni-16.85Cr-16.3Fe-8.57Mo-9.56Ru-5.48W, wt%, was designed and synthesized. The HEA demonstrated a stable FCC structure. The HEA was tested and compared to commercially pure Ni as well as the crystalline corrosion-resistant Ni-based alloy, C22 (Ni-21Cr-3.9Fe-13.3Mo-0.72Co-0.0035 C-0.23Mn-2.9W-0.026Si-0.011P-0.013V-0.0039S, wt%). Cyclic potentiodynamic polarization (CPP) scans were performed in solutions of increasing chlorid
ISSN:2151-2043
2151-2035
DOI:10.1149/MA2017-02/11/750