New Advances in High-Entropy Alloys
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ArticleLanguage: English Publication details: Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute 2021Description: 1 electronic resource (652 p.)ISBN: - books978-3-03943-620-0
- 9783039436194
- 9783039436200
- Research & information: general
- high-entropy alloys
- alloys design
- lightweight alloys
- high entropy alloys
- elemental addition
- annealing treatment
- magnetic property
- microhardness
- in situ X-ray diffraction
- grain refinement
- thermoelectric properties
- scandium effect
- HEA
- high-entropy alloy
- CCA
- compositionally complex alloy
- phase composition
- microstructure
- wear behaviour
- metal matrix composites
- mechanical properties
- high-entropy films
- phase structures
- hardness
- solid-solution
- interstitial phase
- transmission electron microscopy
- compositionally complex alloys
- CrFeCoNi(Nb,Mo)
- corrosion
- sulfuric acid
- sodium chloride
- entropy
- multicomponent
- differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)
- specific heat
- stacking-fault energy
- density functional theory
- nanoscaled high-entropy alloys
- nanodisturbances
- phase transformations
- atomic-scale unstable
- mechanical alloying
- spark plasma sintering
- nanoprecipitates
- annealing
- phase constituent
- ion irradiation
- hardening behavior
- volume swelling
- medium entropy alloy
- high-pressure torsion
- partial recrystallization
- tensile strength
- high-entropy alloys (HEAs)
- phase constitution
- magnetic properties
- Curie temperature
- phase transition
- precipitation
- strengthening
- coherent microstructure
- conventional alloys
- nanocrystalline materials
- high entropy alloy
- sputtering
- deformation and fracture
- strain rate sensitivity
- liquid phase separation
- immiscible alloys
- HEAs
- multicomponent alloys
- miscibility gaps
- multi-principal element alloys
- MPEAs
- complex concentrated alloys
- CCAs
- electron microscopy
- plasticity methods
- plasticity
- serration behavior
- alloy design
- structural metals
- CALPHAD
- solid-solution alloys
- lattice distortion
- phase transformation
- (CoCrFeNi)100−xMox alloys
- corrosion behavior
- gamma double prime nanoparticles
- elemental partitioning
- atom probe tomography
- first-principles calculations
- bcc
- phase stability
- composition scanning
- laser cladding
- high-entropy alloy coating
- AZ91D magnesium alloy
- wear
- kinetics
- deformation
- thermal expansion
- diamond
- composite
- powder metallurgy
- additive manufacturing
- low-activation high-entropy alloys (HEAs)
- high-temperature structural alloys
- microstructures
- compressive properties
- heat-softening resistance
- tensile creep behavior
- microstructural evolution
- creep mechanism
- first-principles calculation
- maximum entropy
- elastic property
- mechanical property
- recrystallization
- laser metal deposition
- elemental powder
- graded material
- refractory high-entropy alloys
- elevated-temperature yield strength
- solid solution strengthening effect
- bulk metallic glass
- complex stress field
- shear band
- flow serration
- deformation mechanism
- ab initio
- configuration entropy
- matrix formulation
- cluster expansion
- cluster variation method
- monte carlo
- thermodynamic integration
- (AlCrTiZrV)-Six-N films
- nanocomposite structure
- refractory high entropy alloys
- medium entropy alloys, mechanical properties
- thin films
- deformation behaviors
- nanocrystalline
- coating
- interface
- mechanical characterization
- high pressure
- polymorphic transition
- solidification
- eutectic dendrites
- hierarchical nanotwins
- precipitation kinetics
- strengthening mechanisms
- elongation prediction
- welding
- Hall–Petch (H–P) effect
- lattice constants
- high-entropy ceramic
- solid-state diffusion
- phase evolution
- mechanical behaviors
- high-entropy film
- low-activation alloys
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In recent years, people have tended to adjust the degree of order/disorder to explore new materials. The degree of order/disorder can be measured by entropy, and it can be divided into two parts: topological disordering and chemical disordering. The former mainly refers to order in the spatial configuration, e.g., amorphous alloys which show short-range ordering but without long-range ordering, while the latter mainly refers to the order in the chemical occupancy, that is to say, the components can replace each other, and typical representatives are high-entropy alloy (HEAs). HEAs, in sharp contrast to traditional alloys based on one or two principal elements, have one striking characteristic: their unusually high entropy of mixing. They have not received much noticed until the review paper entitled “Microstructure and Properties of High-Entropy Alloys” was published in 2014 in the journal of Progress in Materials Science. Numerous reports have shown they exhibit five recognized performance characteristics, namely, strength–plasticity trade-off breaking, irradiation tolerance, corrosion resistance, high-impact toughness within a wider temperature range, and high thermal stability. So far, the development of HEAs has gone through three main stages: 1. Quinary equal-atomic single-phase solid solution alloys; 2. Quaternary or quinary non-equal-atomic multiphase alloys; 3. Medium-entropy alloys, high-entropy fibers, high-entropy films, lightweight HEAs, etc. Nowadays, more in-depth research on high-entropy alloys is urgently needed.
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