Design of high-strength refractory complex solid-solution alloys (1710.06983v2)
Abstract: Nickel-based superalloys and near-equiatomic high-entropy alloys containing Molybdenum are known for higher temperature strength and corrosion resistance. Yet, complex solid-solution alloys offer a huge design space to tune for optimal properties at slightly reduced entropy. For refractory Mo-W-Ta-Ti-Zr, we showcase KKR electronic-structure methods via the coherent-potential approximation to identify alloys over 5-dimensional design space with improved mechanical properties and necessary global (formation enthalpy) and local (short-range order) stability. Deformation is modeled with classical molecular dynamic simulations, validated from our first-principles data. We predict complex solid-solution alloys of improved stability with greatly enhanced modulus of elasticity ($3\times$ at 300 K) over near-equiatomic cases, as validated experimentally, and with higher moduli above 500~K over commercial alloys ($2.3\times$ at 2000 K). We also show that optimal complex solid-solution alloys are not described well by classical potentials due to critical electronic effects.