2018 journal article

Tensile and shear loading of four fcc high-entropy alloys: A first-principles study

PHYSICAL REVIEW B, 97(9).

co-author countries: Hungary 🇭🇺 Sweden 🇸🇪 United States of America 🇺🇸
Source: Web Of Science
Added: August 6, 2018

Ab initio density-functional calculations are used to investigate the response of four face-centered-cubic (fcc) high-entropy alloys (HEAs) to tensile and shear loading. The ideal tensile and shear strengths (ITS and ISS) of the HEAs are studied by employing first-principles alloy theory formulated within the exact muffin-tin orbital method in combination with the coherent-potential approximation. We benchmark the computational accuracy against literature data by studying the ITS under uniaxial [110] tensile loading and the ISS for the $[11\overline{2}](111)$ shear deformation of pure fcc Ni and Al. For the HEAs, we uncover the alloying effect on the ITS and ISS. Under shear loading, relaxation reduces the ISS by $\ensuremath{\sim}50%$ for all considered HEAs. We demonstrate that the dimensionless tensile and shear strengths are significantly overestimated by adopting two widely used empirical models in comparison with our ab initio calculations. In addition, our predicted relationship between the dimensionless shear strength and shear instability are in line with the modified Frenkel model. Using the computed ISS, we derive the half-width of the dislocation core for the present HEAs. Employing the ratio of ITS to ISS, we discuss the intrinsic ductility of HEAs and compare it with a common empirical criterion. We observe a strong linear correlation between the shear instability and the ratio of ITS to ISS, whereas a weak positive correlation is found in the case of the empirical criterion.