The impact of chemical short-range order on the thermophysical properties of medium- and high-entropy alloys

Abstract

The unusual behavior observed in the coefficient of thermal expansion and specific heat capacity of CrFeNi, CoCrNi, and CoCrFeNi medium/high-entropy alloys is commonly referred to as the K-state effect. It is shown to be independent of the Curie temperature, as demonstrated by temperature-dependent magnetic moment measurements. CoCrFeNi alloy is chosen for detailed characterization; potential reasons for the K-state effect such as texture, recrystallization, and second-phase precipitation are ruled out. An examination of the electronic structure indicates the formation of a pseudo-gap in the Density of States, which suggests a specific chemical interaction between Ni and Cr atoms upon alloying. Hybrid Monte Carlo/Molecular Dynamic (MC/MD) simulations indicate the presence of non-negligible chemical short-range order (CSRO). Local lattice distortions are shown to be negligible, although deviations around Cr and Ni elements from those expected in a fully disordered structure are experimentally observed by X-ray absorption spectroscopy. The determined bonding distances are in good agreement with MC/MD calculations. A mechanism is proposed to explain the anomalies and calorimetric experiments and their results are used to validate the mechanism.

Description
Keywords
Chemical short-range order, Differential scanning calorimetry, Dilatometry, High-entropy alloys, Order-disorder effects
Citation
Andreoli, A. F., Fantin, A., Kasatikov, S., Bacurau, V. P., Widom, M., Gargarella, P., et al. (2024). The impact of chemical short-range order on the thermophysical properties of medium- and high-entropy alloys. 238. https://doi.org//10.1016/j.matdes.2024.112724
License
CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 Unported