Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1446875 Acta Materialia 2011 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

The microstructural evolution of dilute Cu-based ternary Cu–Nb alloys during high-temperature annealing was investigated using a combination of transmission electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction and kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) simulations. The experiments showed that, during annealing, the Cu90Nb10 binary alloy undergoes extensive coarsening at 600 °C, with precipitate sizes increasing to >40 nm. Additions of just 1.5 at.% W to this alloy, however, dramatically suppresses the growth; the average precipitate size in the ternary alloy now increases to only ∼10 nm at 600 °C, and only to 18 nm at 700 °C. On annealing at still higher temperatures, the precipitate size then, surprisingly, decreases. The precipitate size distribution at the higher temperatures, moreover, is bimodal. It is also observed that irradiation has no effect on the microstructure of the ternary alloys above 600 °C. KMC simulations indicate that the saturation of the average precipitate size, followed by its decrease as the annealing temperature is increased and the development of a bimodal size distribution can be explained by competition between thermodynamic and kinetic effects during precipitation in this ternary alloy.

► Alloying Cu-Nb with W yields nanostructures stable at very high temperature and under irradiation. ► Competition between thermodynamics and kinetics lead to bimodal precipitate size distribution and apparent inverse coarsening. ► Atomistic kinetic Monte Carlo simulations offer rationalization of observed experimental effects.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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