Effect of Si on the evolution of plasticity mechanisms, grain refinement and hardness during high-pressure torsion of a non-equiatomic CoCrMnNi multi-principal element alloy
Kaushal Kishore, Avanish Kumar Chandan, Pham Tran Hung, Saurabh Kumar, Manish Ranjan, Megumi Kawasaki, Jenõ Gubicza
Abstract
The present study unraveled the defining role of small silicon (Si) addition (5 atomic %) in dramatically altering the plasticity mechanisms, grain refinement and hardening response of a non-equiatomic CoCrMnNi multi-principal element alloy (MPEA) during high-pressure torsion (HPT) processing. Both the Si-free and the Si-added MPEAs had a face-centered cubic (FCC) structure and were subjected to a quasi-constrained HPT processing at 6 GPa pressure to different number of turns (0.5 and 5). Microstructure evolution was studied at the center and edge of the HPT-processed discs using X-ray diffraction line profile analysis (XLPA) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM). Si addition altered the predominant plasticity mechanism from micro-band formation to extensive occurrence of nano-twinning at the early stage of HPT processing. At later stages of HPT processing, both alloys exhibited deformation twinning but its propensity was considerably higher for the Si-added MPEA, as revealed by ∼50% higher twin fault probability. Additionally, the Si-added MPEA showed ∼30% higher dislocation density at any given stage of HPT processing compared to the Si-free MPEA. A significantly accelerated nano-structuring coupled with a finer saturation grain size was observed in the Si-added MPEA (34 nm for Si-free versus 23 nm for Si-added). These effects can be explained by the influence of Si addition on lowering the stacking fault energy (SFE) (from ∼40 mJ/m2 in Si-free to ∼20 mJ/m2 in Si-added MPEA) and increasing the solute pinning effect of Si on lattice defects. The plasticity mechanisms at nano-scale were also influenced by the presence of Si as confirmed by the formation of nano-twins and stacking faults inside the nano-grains for the Si-added and Si-free MPEAs, respectively. The differences in plasticity mechanisms and microstructure evolution resulted in enhanced hardness in the early stages of HPT processing for the Si-added MPEA, but the difference in hardness between the two alloys tended to be reduced at higher strains.