In the present study,the micro-mechanical behavior of Co CrFeMnNi high-entropy alloy was investigated using an in-house micro-tensile setup at room temperature and 550℃ at different strain rates.Micromechanical prope...In the present study,the micro-mechanical behavior of Co CrFeMnNi high-entropy alloy was investigated using an in-house micro-tensile setup at room temperature and 550℃ at different strain rates.Micromechanical properties are compared with those obtained using a commercial macro-tensile setup to check a potential sample size effect.Results show that mechanical properties such as yield strength,ultimate tensile strength and uniform elongation are independent of the sample size.However,the total elongation-to-failure of micro-samples is found to be lower than those of macro-counterparts.Apart from this,the material exhibits serrated plastic flow,which is strain rate dependent in terms of the onset strain and shape of serrations at 550℃.Furthermore,transmission electron microscopy investigations were performed to correlate the occurrence of serrations to the observed distinct dislocation structures.Microstructural results provide direct evidence that dislocations are curved and hence effectively pinned and unpinned at the lowest applied strain rate,which might be responsible for the occurrence of serrated plastic flow.展开更多
基金financial support by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft within the framework of the Priority Program“Compositionally Complex Alloys-High-Entropy Alloys(CCA-HEA)”(SPP 2006),grant no.KA 4631/1-1,FR 1714/7-1。
文摘In the present study,the micro-mechanical behavior of Co CrFeMnNi high-entropy alloy was investigated using an in-house micro-tensile setup at room temperature and 550℃ at different strain rates.Micromechanical properties are compared with those obtained using a commercial macro-tensile setup to check a potential sample size effect.Results show that mechanical properties such as yield strength,ultimate tensile strength and uniform elongation are independent of the sample size.However,the total elongation-to-failure of micro-samples is found to be lower than those of macro-counterparts.Apart from this,the material exhibits serrated plastic flow,which is strain rate dependent in terms of the onset strain and shape of serrations at 550℃.Furthermore,transmission electron microscopy investigations were performed to correlate the occurrence of serrations to the observed distinct dislocation structures.Microstructural results provide direct evidence that dislocations are curved and hence effectively pinned and unpinned at the lowest applied strain rate,which might be responsible for the occurrence of serrated plastic flow.