Litcius/Paper detail

Shearing brittle intermetallics enhances cryogenic strength and ductility of steels

Feng Wang, Miao Song, Mohamed Naguib Elkot, Ning Yao, Binhan Sun, Min Song, Zhangwei Wang, Dierk Raabe

2024Science213 citationsDOI

Abstract

Precipitates are crucial for crafting mechanically strong metallic materials. In this work, we report the dislocation cutting of B2 (ordered body-centered cubic) nanoprecipitates, typically considered nonshearable intermetallics, in a lightweight compositionally complex steel during cryogenic tensile loading. Shearing is enabled by the high strength level for dislocation glide within the austenitic matrix, attributed to the substantial strengthening from subnanoscale local chemical ordering zones and the pronounced solid solution strengthening from the multiprincipal elements in the matrix. This mechanism not only harnesses the intense strengthening and strain hardening provided by otherwise impenetrable brittle nanoprecipitates but also introduces ductility through their sequential shearing with ongoing deformation. Our steel thus showcases ultrahigh cryogenic tensile strength up to 2 gigapascal at a remarkable tensile elongation of 34%. This study reveals a new strategy for designing high-performance structural materials.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceIntermetallicBrittlenessShearing (physics)Ultimate tensile strengthWork hardeningDuctility (Earth science)MetallurgyAusteniteDislocationComposite materialStrain hardening exponentMicrostructureAlloyCreepMetal Alloys Wear and PropertiesMicrostructure and mechanical propertiesMicrostructure and Mechanical Properties of Steels