Partition of plastic work into heat and stored cold work in CoCrNi-based chemically complex alloys
X Qiao and FH Cao and MY Su and C Yang and T Li and G Ding and YY Tan and Y Chen and HY Wang and MQ Jiang and LH Dai, JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS, 135, 145103 (2024).
DOI: 10.1063/5.0191314
The Taylor-Quinney coefficient (TQC) stands as a critical parameter
intricately linked to the thermomechanical coupling plastic deformation
behavior, defined as the ratio of heat generation to plastic work.
Combining experimental studies and atomistic simulations, the TQC is
discussed in the context of three CoCrNi-based chemically complex
medium/high-entropy alloys (CoCrNi, CoCrNiFe, and CoCrNiFeMn). Notably,
the obtained TQC of these alloys hovers around 0.7, well below the
generally assumed value of 0.9-1 in traditional metals associated with
adiabatic shearing. The lower TQC implies that these alloys possess the
much better capability of storing energy of cold-work. It is further
found that immobile dislocations are the most effective carriers for
storing the energy of cold-work. Among these three alloys, CoCrNiFeMn
exhibits the highest TQC due to its relatively lower density of immobile
dislocations and Lomer-Cottrell locks.
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