4.7 Article

Synthesis of biocompatible high-entropy alloy TiNbZrTaHf by high-pressure torsion

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2021.141869

Keywords

Severe plastic deformation (SPD); High-entropy alloy (HEA); High-pressure torsion (HPT); Phase transformation; Biomaterials

Funding

  1. WPI-I2CNER, Kyushu University, Japan
  2. Light Metals Educational Foundation of Japan
  3. MEXT, Japan [19H05176, 21H00150]
  4. Instituto Tecnologico de Costa Rica [CF1490027]
  5. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [21H00150] Funding Source: KAKEN

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In this study, biocompatible nanostructured high-entropy alloys were successfully synthesized using the high-pressure torsion method. The research compared the characteristics of different alloys and found that as the number of principal elements increased, hardness increased and grain size decreased, but these variations became less significant with further increase in configurational entropy.
High-entropy alloys (HEAs), a novel type of materials with high configurational entropy, have aroused a huge interest due to a promising range of functional properties including biocompatibility. In this study, the highpressure torsion (HPT) method was implemented as a mechanical alloying route to synthesize biocompatible nanostructured HEAs with the bcc structure. An equiatomic quinary TiNbZrTaHf HEA was successfully synthesized via the HPT method and its characteristics were compared with the binary TiNb, ternary TiNbZr and quaternary TiNbZrTa alloys to have an insight into the effect of configurational entropy on microstructure and mechanical properties of these biomaterials. The grain size decreased, the strain-rate sensitivity reduced, and the hardness increased with increasing the number of principal elements from 2 to 3, but these variations became less significant with further increase in the configurational entropy. Small nanograins, solid solution hardening, dislocation activity together with high entropy effect in the HEA led to a high hardness of 564 Hv and a moderate elastic modulus of 79 GPa which are promising mechanical properties for biomedical applications.

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