New advances in high-entropy alloys
In recent years, people have tended to adjust the degree of order/disorder to explore new materials. The degree of order/disorder can be measured by entropy, and it can be divided into two parts: topological disordering and chemical disordering. The former mainly refers to order in the spatial confi...
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          | Main Author | |
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| Format | eBook Book | 
| Language | English | 
| Published | 
        Basel
          MDPI
    
        2020
     MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute  | 
| Subjects | |
| Online Access | Get full text | 
| ISBN | 9783039436194 3039436198 3039436201 9783039436200  | 
| DOI | 10.3390/books978-3-03943-620-0 | 
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| Summary: | In recent years, people have tended to adjust the degree of order/disorder to explore new materials. The degree of order/disorder can be measured by entropy, and it can be divided into two parts: topological disordering and chemical disordering. The former mainly refers to order in the spatial configuration, e.g., amorphous alloys which show short-range ordering but without long-range ordering, while the latter mainly refers to the order in the chemical occupancy, that is to say, the components can replace each other, and typical representatives are high-entropy alloy (HEAs). HEAs, in sharp contrast to traditional alloys based on one or two principal elements, have one striking characteristic: their unusually high entropy of mixing. They have not received much noticed until the review paper entitled “Microstructure and Properties of High-Entropy Alloys” was published in 2014 in the journal of Progress in Materials Science. Numerous reports have shown they exhibit five recognized performance characteristics, namely, strength–plasticity trade-off breaking, irradiation tolerance, corrosion resistance, high-impact toughness within a wider temperature range, and high thermal stability. So far, the development of HEAs has gone through three main stages: 1. Quinary equal-atomic single-phase solid solution alloys; 2. Quaternary or quinary non-equal-atomic multiphase alloys; 3. Medium-entropy alloys, high-entropy fibers, high-entropy films, lightweight HEAs, etc. Nowadays, more in-depth research on high-entropy alloys is urgently needed. | 
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| Bibliography: | Includes bibliographical references "This is a reprint of articles from the special issue published online in the open access journal Entropy (ISSN 1099-4300)" -- T.p. verso  | 
| ISBN: | 9783039436194 3039436198 3039436201 9783039436200  | 
| DOI: | 10.3390/books978-3-03943-620-0 |