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      Nanoporous Al‐Ni‐Co‐Ir‐Mo High‐Entropy Alloy for Record‐High Water Splitting Activity in Acidic Environments

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          Nanostructured High-Entropy Alloys with Multiple Principal Elements: Novel Alloy Design Concepts and Outcomes

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            A critical review of high entropy alloys and related concepts

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              A fracture-resistant high-entropy alloy for cryogenic applications.

              High-entropy alloys are equiatomic, multi-element systems that can crystallize as a single phase, despite containing multiple elements with different crystal structures. A rationale for this is that the configurational entropy contribution to the total free energy in alloys with five or more major elements may stabilize the solid-solution state relative to multiphase microstructures. We examined a five-element high-entropy alloy, CrMnFeCoNi, which forms a single-phase face-centered cubic solid solution, and found it to have exceptional damage tolerance with tensile strengths above 1 GPa and fracture toughness values exceeding 200 MPa·m(1/2). Furthermore, its mechanical properties actually improve at cryogenic temperatures; we attribute this to a transition from planar-slip dislocation activity at room temperature to deformation by mechanical nanotwinning with decreasing temperature, which results in continuous steady strain hardening. Copyright © 2014, American Association for the Advancement of Science.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                (View ORCID Profile)
                Journal
                Small
                Small
                Wiley
                1613-6810
                1613-6829
                October 14 2019
                November 2019
                October 09 2019
                November 2019
                : 15
                : 47
                : 1904180
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Materials Science and EngineeringHarbin Institute of Technology Shenzhen 518055 China
                [2 ]Department of Precision InstrumentTsinghua University Beijing 100084 China
                [3 ]College of ChemistryChemical Engineering and Materials ScienceShandong Normal University Jinan 250014 China
                [4 ]Shenzhen R&D Center for Al‐based Hydrogen Hydrolysis MaterialsHarbin Institute of Technology Shenzhen 518055 China
                [5 ]State Key Laboratory of Advanced Welding and JoiningHarbin Institute of Technology Shenzhen 518055 China
                [6 ]Institut National de la Recherche Scientifique‐Énergie Matériaux et Télécommunications Varennes QC J3X 1S2 Canada
                Article
                10.1002/smll.201904180
                31596058
                3b23a151-81dc-404f-b831-44b5367e6675
                © 2019

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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