4.6 Article

Extended Shear Deformation of the Immiscible Cu-Nb Alloy Resulting in Nanostructuring and Oxygen Ingress with Enhancement in Mechanical Properties

Journal

ACS OMEGA
Volume 7, Issue 16, Pages 13721-13736

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsomega.1c07368

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Laboratory Directed Research and Development program at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory (PNNL) as part of the Solid Phase Processing Science initiative
  2. U.S. Department of Energy's (DOE's) Office of Biological and Environmental Research
  3. DOE [DEAC05-76RL01830, DE-NE0008739]
  4. NSF MRI [1726897]
  5. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn
  6. Directorate For Engineering [1726897] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This study investigates the microstructural evolution of immiscible alloys under high-strain shear deformation and reveals the influence of these microstructural changes on mechanical properties. The results show that shear deformation can result in amorphization and nanocrystallization, as well as a significant increase in alloy hardness and yield strength.
Deformation processing of immiscible systems is observed to disrupt thermodynamic equilibrium, often resulting in nonequilibrium microstructures. The microstructural changes including nanostructuring, hierarchical distribution of phases, localized solute supersaturation, and oxygen ingress result from high-strain extended deformation, causing a significant change in mechanical properties. Because of the dynamic evolution of the material under large strain shear load, a detailed understanding of the transformation pathway has not been established. Additionally, the influence of these microstructural changes on mechanical properties is also not well characterized. Here, an immiscible Cu-4 at. % Nb alloy is subjected to a high-strain shear deformation (similar to 200); the deformation-induced changes in the morphology, crystal structure, and composition of Cu and Nb phases as a function of total strain are characterized using transmission electron microscopy and atom probe tomography. Furthermore, a multimodal experiment-guided computational approach is used to depict the initiation of deformation by an increase in misorientation boundaries by crystal plasticity-based grain misorientation modeling (strain similar to 0.6). Then, co-deformation and nanolamination of Cu and Nb are envisaged by a finite element method-based computational fluid dynamic model with strain ranging from 10 to 200. Finally, the experimentally observed amorphization of the severely sheared supersaturated Cu-Nb-O phase was validated using the first principle-based simulation using density functional theory while highlighting the influence of oxygen ingress during deformation. Furthermore, the nanocrystalline microstructure shows a >2-fold increase in hardness and compressive yield strength of the alloy, elucidating the potential of deformation processing to obtain high-strength low-alloyed metals. Our approach presents a step-by-step evolution of a microstructure in an immiscible alloy undergoing severe shear deformation, which is broadly applicable to materials processing based on friction stir, extrusion, rolling, and surface shear deformation under wear and can be directly applied to understanding material behavior during these processes.

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