Effect of Al Content on Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of CoCrFeNiMn High-Entropy Alloy
Fuyuan Dong, Jinlong Zhang, Xinlong Hu, Chengbo Wu, Huiying Li, Mengyuan Jiang, Ning LiIn this study, CoCrFeNiMn high-entropy alloys (HEAs) with different aluminum (Al) contents were fabricated, and the effects of Al content on the microstructure evolution and mechanical properties were systematically explored. The microstructural characterization results indicated that the Al content exerted a crucial regulatory effect on the crystal structure of the alloy. With increasing Al content, shifts in the characteristic XRD peaks indicate lattice expansion of the alloy. Meanwhile, the phase structure continuously evolved from a single face-centered cubic (FCC) structure to an FCC/body-centered cubic (BCC) dual-phase structure, and then finally transformed into a BCC-dominated structure. Appropriate Al element addition could produce localized stress fields near dislocations and achieve prominent solid-solution strengthening, which effectively inhibited dislocation movement and further improved the yield strength, tensile strength, and hardness of the alloy. In contrast, excessive Al addition would break through the solid solubility limit of the alloy matrix, causing obvious phase separation and the precipitation of brittle B2-ordered NiAl-type intermetallic secondary phases. These brittle secondary phases easily induced crack initiation in the plastic deformation process, which significantly deteriorated the ductility, work-hardening ability, and impact toughness of the alloys.