Hierarchical crack buffering triples ductility in eutectic herringbone high-entropy alloys
Peijian Shi, Runguang Li, Yi Li, Yuebo Wen, Yunbo Zhong, Weili Ren, Zhe Shen, Tianxiang Zheng, Jianchao Peng, Liang Xue, Pengfei Hu, Na Min, Yong Zhang, Yang Ren, Peter K. Liaw, Dierk Raabe, Yandong Wang
Abstract
In human-made malleable materials, microdamage such as cracking usually limits material lifetime. Some biological composites, such as bone, have hierarchical microstructures that tolerate cracks but cannot withstand high elongation. We demonstrate a directionally solidified eutectic high-entropy alloy (EHEA) that successfully reconciles crack tolerance and high elongation. The solidified alloy has a hierarchically organized herringbone structure that enables bionic-inspired hierarchical crack buffering. This effect guides stable, persistent crystallographic nucleation and growth of multiple microcracks in abundant poor-deformability microstructures. Hierarchical buffering by adjacent dynamic strain-hardened features helps the cracks to avoid catastrophic growth and percolation. Our self-buffering herringbone material yields an ultrahigh uniform tensile elongation (~50%), three times that of conventional nonbuffering EHEAs, without sacrificing strength.