Tunable energy landscape of screw dislocation cores by compositional fluctuations in bcc high-entropy alloys from first-principles calculations
PPPO Borges and RO Ritchie and M Asta, PHYSICAL REVIEW MATERIALS, 9, 093602 (2025).
DOI: 10.1103/2xb2-7nn7
The energy landscape of screw dislocation cores plays a central role in dislocation-mediated deformation mechanisms in body-centered cubic (bcc) metals. In bcc high-entropy alloys (HEAs), this energy landscape is modulated by local compositional fluctuations, which has important implications for deformation processes in these materials. Through first-principles calculations, this study investigates high-symmetry screw dislocation core structures in NbTaMoW and NbTaTiHf bcc HEAs. The results show that alloying group IV transition metals lead to large local lattice distortions at dislocation cores, which is demonstrated to be an important factor governing fluctuations in core configurations along a dislocation line. Importantly, group IV elements near the core induce features in the energy landscape that are exclusive for HEAs, specifically lowering the energy of core configurations that are unstable in elemental bcc metals. A combined influence of these chemical effects with crystallographic details enables the activation of 112 glide planes, a feature that has been linked to ductility improvements in bcc HEAs. These findings provide new insights into the atomic-scale mechanisms underlying dislocation mobility in bcc HEAs, offering a pathway for designing materials with tailored mechanical properties.
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