Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7961817 | Computational Materials Science | 2013 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
Using first-principles simulation, we investigate the effect of alloying element titanium (Ti) on the mechanical properties of vanadium (V). The ideal tensile strengths of Ti1.85V98.15 and Ti6.25V93.75 alloys in the [1 0 0] direction are 18.6 GPa and 17.5 GPa, respectively. These values are, respectively, reduced by 2.6% and 8.4% in comparison with 19.1 GPa of pure V. This suggests that such alloying effect of Ti on the tensile strength of V appears to be relatively large. The generalized fault energies have been calculated including the unstable stacking energy (γcl) and the cleavage energy (γcl) in a pure V and Ti0.35V99.65 alloy along the most preferable {1 1 0}ã111ã slip system. Ti can decrease γcl from 1.705 J/m2 to 1.704 J/m2 and simultaneously increase γus from 0.308 J/m2 to 0.311 J/m2 in comparison with the pure V. The ratios of γcl/γus for the pure V and Ti0.35V99.65 alloy are 5.536 and 5.479, respectively. The value is decreased by 1.03%, meaning that the ductility of dilute Ti0.35V99.65 alloy can be slightly reduced in comparison with that of the pure V.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Computational Mechanics
Authors
Li-Jiang Gui, Yue-Lin Liu, Wei-Tian Wang, Ye Wei, Ying Zhang, Guang-Hong Lu, Jun-En Yao,