MRS Bulletin Materials News Podcast

Episode 1: High-strength alloys created using thermally stable nanoparticles

January 18, 2023 MRS Bulletin Season 5 Episode 1
MRS Bulletin Materials News Podcast
Episode 1: High-strength alloys created using thermally stable nanoparticles
Show Notes Transcript

In this podcast episode, MRS Bulletin’s Laura Leay interviews Tao Yang from the City University of Hong Kong in China who focuses on the innovative design of advanced structural materials. In the area of high-strength alloys, Yang’s research team looked specifically at how to stabilize nanoparticles at high temperatures. In an alloy of Ni59.9-xCoxFe13-Cr15Al6Ti6B0.1, Yang’s team achieved ultra-stable nanoparticles at 800–1000°C. They achieved this effect by tailoring the concentration of cobalt. While nanoparticles have already been seen to improve the strength of materials, Yang’s team has provided insight into how this can be achieved at high temperatures. This research is published in a recent issue of Nature Communications (https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-32620-6).

LAURA LEAY: Welcome to MRS Bulletin’s Materials News Podcast, providing breakthrough news & interviews with researchers on the hot topics in materials research. My name is Laura Leay. High entropy alloys have garnered a lot of attention for their unique properties; properties that aren’t completely understood. One interesting aspect is the sluggish lattice diffusion effect, where very different sizes of the component atoms greatly distort the crystal lattice, leading to energy barriers for atomic diffusion. One research team has made use of the sluggish lattice diffusion effect to create high strength alloys, using nanoparticle strengthening.

TAO YANG: We mainly focus on the innovative design of the advanced structural material. So we need this kind of material to be very stable at the high temperatures. For this material the first problem is some instability of this kind of material. The precipitates – actually is the nanoparticles – go to be dissolved at the high temperature. How to make this nanoparticle be stabilized at the high temperature is a key motivation.

LAURA LEAY: That was Tao Yang from the City University of Hong Kong in China. His team has been looking at an alloy of nickel, iron, chromium, aluminum, titanium and tiny amount of boron where up to half of the nickel was replaced by cobalt. The team found that nanoparticle growth at elevated temperature – up to 1000°C for a maximum of 240 hours – was inhibited by the addition of cobalt. Additions of 15 and 30 atom percent were tested. The nanoparticles were comprised of titanium, aluminum and nickel, forming an L12 crystal structure, whereas the matrix was a face-centered cubic into which the iron and chromium as well as some nickel partitioned. The cobalt also tended to partition into the matrix. The elemental mapping was used as the basis for kinetic modelling where volume diffusion and diffusion across the interface were considered. 

TAO YANG: We can find that the cobalt elements play a significant role in inhibiting the growth of the nanoparticles. So we find that when the cobalt elements go to the 15 or 30 concentration and it’s controlled – the elements – by lattice diffusion. 

LAURA LEAY: Without the addition of cobalt, diffusion across the interface with the matrix controlled the coarsening of the nanoparticles but when cobalt was added to the alloy at either 15 or 30 atom percent, a different mechanism was dominant. The kinetic modelling also showed that the addition of cobalt strongly affected the inter-diffusion of aluminum. Atomistic simulation using density functional theory showed that cobalt atoms, when located in close proximity to aluminum atoms, increased the energy barrier for the aluminum.

TAO YANG: Cobalt will inhibit the mobility of aluminum as well as other elements. So DFT showed that is why the cobalt can make the aluminum to be so difficult to move.

LAURA LEAY: These results not only support the development of advanced materials that possess excellent strength at elevated temperatures, but also provide insight into the properties of high entropy alloys.

TAO YANG: For high entropy alloy, a lot of studies have claimed that there is sluggish diffusion effect but the problem is that it’s not the case for all the alloy systems; only for some specific alloy compositions and also the concentrations. So for our studies, that is the most important thing that we found out: what is the most key element for the high entropy alloy. And then to find out the origins: how to control this kind of sluggish diffusion effect.

LAURA LEAY: Nanoparticles have already been seen to improve the strength of materials and now Tao Yang’s team has provided insight into how this can be achieved at high temperatures. This work was published in a recent issue of Nature Communications. My name is Laura Leay from the Materials Research Society. For more news, log onto the MRS Bulletin website at mrsbulletin.org and follow us on twitter, @MRSBulletin. Don’t miss the next episode of MRS Bulletin Materials News – subscribe now. Thank you for listening.