Concentration Waves in High-Entropy Alloys - a new alloy design approach
ORAL
Abstract
Chemical short-range order (SRO) in solid solutions can be interpreted as a ``concentration wave'' - a Fourier decomposition of nascent order - identified experimentally via Warren-Cowley SRO parameters. We present a rigorous thermodynamic theory to predict and uniquely interpret the SRO in N$-$component alloys. Based on KKR-CPA electronic structure, we implemented this method using thermodynamic linear-response to include all alloying effects, e.g., band-filling, hybridization, Fermi$-$surface nesting and van Hove instabilities. We apply this first-principles method to high-entropy alloys (HEAs), i.e., solid solutions with N$>$4 that inhibit small-cell order due to large entropy competing against ordering enthalpy, as their properties are sensitive to SRO. We validated theory with comparison to experiments in A2 Nb-Al-Ti and A1 Cu-Ni-Zn . We then predict and analyze SRO and mechanical trends in Ni-Ti-Zr-Cu-Al and Co-Cr-Fe-Mn-Ni systems - showcasing this new first-principles-based alloy design method.
*Work was supported by the USDoE, Office of Sci., Basic Energy Sci., Materials Sci. and Eng. Division for `Materials Discovery.' Research was performed at Ames Lab, operated by Iowa State University under contract \#DE-AC02-07CH11358.
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