Insights Into Orientation Dependent Plasticity Deformation of HfNbTaTiZr Refractory High Entropy Alloy
Insights Into Orientation Dependent Plasticity Deformation of HfNbTaTiZr Refractory High Entropy Alloy
Insights Into Orientation Dependent Plasticity Deformation of HfNbTaTiZr Refractory High Entropy Alloy
PII: S0749-6419(23)00351-0
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijplas.2023.103867
Reference: INTPLA 103867
Please cite this article as: Wei JIAN , Lu REN , Insights into orientation-dependent plasticity defor-
mation of HfNbTaTiZr refractory high entropy alloy: An atomistic investigation, International Journal of
Plasticity (2023), doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ijplas.2023.103867
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Authors’ affiliations:
1
School of Mechanical Engineering & Mechanics, Ningbo University, Ningbo 315211,
Zhejiang, China
2
Zhejiang Provincial Key Laboratory of Part Rolling Technology, Ningbo 315211, P.R.
China
Abstract:
HfNbTaTiZr refractory high entropy alloy has emerged as a prospective structural
material suitable for high-temperature applications owing to its remarkable
combination of high strength, good tensile ductility and excellent high-temperature
properties. However, the insufficient understanding of the mechanical responses of
this refractory high entropy alloy has hindered the improvement of performance in alloy
design and potential for engineering applications. Therefore, the orientation-
dependent tensile behaviors of HfNbTaTiZr refractory high entropy alloy are
investigated from nanoscale using molecular dynamics simulations. The simulation
results show that the mechanical responses under uniaxial tension are strongly
correlated to the crystallographic orientation with respect to the loading direction, and
the highest Young’s modulus and yield strength are achieved along [111] direction. In
addition, the deformation twinning and phase transformations are charactered. The
tensile behavior oriented in [001] direction is dominated by the BCC-FCC phase
transformation, while that oriented in [110] and [111] directions by the BCC-HCP
phase transformation. The results reveal the critical role of tensile loading direction
in generating specific crystalline microstructures under high-strain-rate loading
conditions, which can enlighten new design strategy in engineering refractory high
entropy alloys with specific orientations for extreme environments.
Keywords:
Refractory high-entropy alloys; Tensile deformation; Orientation dependence; Phase
transformation; Molecular dynamics simulations
Given the detailed description of material behaviors at the atomistic level and effective
prediction of material properties (Borde et al., 2023; Huang et al., 2022), molecular
dynamics (MD) simulations have proven to be an effective and reliable method to
unravel the mechanical behaviors of HfNbTaTiZr HEAs. The chemical short-range
order (SRO) in HEAs, which is an important feature in multi-principal element solid
solutions, can be well characterized in MD simulations (Wu et al., 2021). The
influence of SRO on the ultimate strength and ductility CoCuFeNiPd HEA (Chen et al.,
2021) has been evaluated based on hybrid MD and Monte Carlo simulations. The
initial deformation induced by partial dislocation slip and the continued deformation
governed by twining and perfect dislocation slip with the effect of SRO and grain size
have been discovered in CoCrNi medium entropy alloy (Gupta et al., 2022). It is
found that the twinning mechanisms include the nucleation of a second leading partial
at the grain boundary as the twinning source and the glide of two leading partials along
two different slip planes that intersect within a grain which acts as the intragranular
twin source. As to the BCC crystals, the screw dislocations glide is generally
dominant, especially the a/2<111> screw dislocations (Eleti et al., 2021). The
112 111 deformation twinning has been observed in NbTaTiZr medium entropy
alloy, while 110 110 and 111 110 have been identified as the slip systems in
The objective of this study is to investigate the mechanical behaviors during tensile
deformation along different crystallographic orientations in HfNbTaTiZr HEAs using
MD simulations. The mechanical responses, phase transformation and underlying
mechanisms have been analyzed with the aim to improve the tensile strength and
ductility synergistically in refractory HEA systems. The atomistic model based on
equiatomic BCC HfNbTaTiZr structure is firstly constructed, and the uniaxial tensile
deformation with a fixed strain rate is performed along [001], [110] and [111]
crystallographic orientations. The selection of the three directions is motivated by
previous experimental results that the HfNbTaTiZr crystallites show preferred
orientation of <110> and <100> (Čížek et al., 2018), and the grains are found to
preferentially have <001> or <111> orientations parallel to the loading deformation
(Eleti et al., 2019). In addition, the cross-slip at the scale of lattice has been found to
share the common [111] direction (Charpagne et al., 2022). The tensile properties as
well as atomic arrangement and displacement under tensile loading are characterized to
demonstrate the mechanical responses of HEA systems and the effect of
crystallographic orientation. The simulation results uncover the relationship between
microstructure evolution and mechanical properties in HfNbTaTiZr HEA systems under
tensile deformation, and illustrates how the phase transformation along different
crystallographic orientations affect the corresponding strength and ductility. The
revealed mechanism can provide further insights into the design and engineering of
refractory HEA with enhanced strength-ductility synergy for practical applications.
2. Methods
The MD simulations under tensile deformation of HfNbTaTiZr systems are performed
using a large-scale atomic/molecular massively parallel simulator (LAMMPS)
(Plimpton, 1995). The equiatomic HfNbTaTiZr HEA is a BCC single-phase solid
solution with average grain size at the micrometer scale (Čížek et al., 2018; Eleti et al.,
2019; Mills et al., 2023). The phase transformation generally takes place in the single-
phase structure (Chen et al., 2019a). Therefore, a single-crystal and dislocation-free
structure is adopted to investigate the corresponding mechanical response, which
should satisfy the need to comprehensively analyze the tensile deformation mechanism
and phase transformation in MD simulations. The lattice constant is initially set as
3.40 Å, which follows the measured experimental value for HfNbTaTiZr HEA (Senkov
et al., 2011). For the [001]-oriented model, the simulation box is set by repeating 25,
25 and 50 of the unit cell in x-[100], y-[010] and z-[001] directions. Correspondingly,
the initial size is 88.8 Å × 88.8 Å × 177.5 Å containing 62,500 atoms. For the [110]-
oriented model, the simulation box is set by repeating 15, 15 and 30 of the unit cell in
x-[ 111 ], y-[ 112 ] and z-[110] directions, and the initial size is 92.2 Å × 87.0 Å × 150.6
Å containing 54,000 atoms. For the [111]-oriented model, the simulation box is set
by repeating 15, 15 and 30 of the unit cell in x-[110 ], y-[112 ] and z-[111] directions,
and the initial size is 75.3 Å × 87.0 Å × 184.5 Å containing 54,000 atoms. The
periodic boundary condition is applied for the three directions in all the systems. The
current size ensures the observation of mechanical behaviors and phase transformation,
while benefits the computational efficiency. The detailed verification is shown in the
Supplementary Information. The atoms of the selected five elements with the near-
equiatomic elemental composition constraint of 20% are randomly distributed in the
model. In order to investigate the effect of crystallographic orientations, the HEA
systems are aligned in [001], [110] and [111] directions with z axis respectively.
Hundreds of models are constructed by changing the random seed value in the setting
of random distribution, and calculating the total energy of each optimized model after
energy minimization. The constructed sample with the lowest energy and stable
structure is selected for the subsequent MD simulations. As the arc-melting technique
has been used to synthesize HfNbTaTiZr HEAs (Senkov et al., 2012; Senkov et al.,
2011), the similar preparation process is repeated in order to make the model as close
as possible to the actual situation of as-cast HEA samples. All the models are heated
up from 300 K to 2000 K at a constant rate of 0.007 K/fs, followed by the relaxation
for 1 ns, and then quenched from 2000 K to 300 K at a constant rate of 0.007 K/fs
during annealing. The models are further equilibrated for 10 ns to obtained the final
relaxed structures.
near the i-type atom in shell m and c j is the concentration of j-type atom in the system;
parameter at the nearest neighbor (m = 1) for each pair in the three HEA systems are
calculated and shown in Figure 1(c). All the parameter values are very close to zero,
indicating that all the constructed HEA models are nearly random solid solutions
without significant local chemical order or segregation. In addition, these constructed
HEA structures are defect free without consideration of the possible oxide layer on the
surface.
After equilibration, the samples were separately stretched along z axis with different
crystallographic orientations at the constant strain rates of 1 × 108 s-1 to reveal the
microstructure evolution. The loading rate in MD simulations is within the ultra-high
strain rate region, which is much higher than that applied in conventional mechanical
experiments according to standard test methods. Such ultra-high strain rate at the
room temperature can be achieved from extreme loading conditions, such as laser-
generated shock or impact loading (Piao et al., 2016; Wilkerson, 2017; Yaakobi et al.,
2005). During tensile loading, the NPT ensemble is adopted to maintain the
temperature of 300 K and zero pressure. The stress of the three samples is calculated
by averaging the stresses of all atoms based on the Virial stress theorem. The
polyhedral template matching (PTM) method that determines structural similarity
based on root-mean-square deviation (Larsen et al., 2016) implemented in OVITO
(Stukowski, 2010) are employed to characterize the atomic structure during plastic
deformation. To characterize the local shear deformation during tensile loading, the
von Mises local shear strain invariant of each atom in the system is calculated using the
equation (Shimizu et al., 2007):
6
where is the component of the local Lagrangian strain matrix for each atom.
Figure 1. (a) Atomistic structures of HfNbTaTiZr HEAs with z axis along [001], [110]
and [111] crystallographic orientation with the snapshots showing different
arrangements of atoms; (b) Pair distribution functions of atoms in the HEA system; (c)
The chemical SRO parameters ij of all species pairs in the three HEA models. The
1
values of chemical SRO parameter ij1 are nearly zero, indicating the random mixing
The evolution of atomic structures during tensile deformation are also characterized
along with the stress-strain curves, and the fraction of various types of atomic structure
are shown in Figure 2(b), 2(d) and 2(f). When the stress starts to drop for the [001]-
oriented sample, the fraction of FCC- and HCP-type atoms increase simultaneously
during the plastic deformation. The stress fluctuations for the [001]-oriented sample
is caused by the phase transition from FCC to HCP phase. The second peak of the
stress is caused by the reappearance of BCC-type atoms at the strain of 47%. Such
FCC-BCC phase transformation is found to be helpful to increase the strength and
plasticity in HEAs (Wu and Shao, 2023). This phenomenon with two peaks in stress-
strain curves has been observed in the experiments for HfNbTaTiZr system with an
increase of stress in the strain-hardening stage, and the strain-hardening rate curve
showed a typical hump reflecting the high strain-hardening (Eleti et al., 2020a). The
second yield-like point from the strain rate jump has been observed in the true stress-
strain curve for equiatomic HfNbTaTiZr HEA (Mills et al., 2023). Similarly, the drop
of the stress is mainly triggered by the phase transformation from BCC-type to HCP-
type atomic structure, and the increase at the second peak is caused by the slight
increase of the fraction of BCC-type atoms for the [110]- and [111]-oriented samples.
The stress fluctuations are influenced by the appearance of amorphous regions
consisted of different atomic structures. The phase transformation driven by
deformation has been observed in HEA systems in both experiments and simulations
(Fang et al., 2019; Huang et al., 2017; Niu et al., 2018). Especially, similar stress
drops due to phase transformation have been observed in other references from
experiments (Lee et al., 2021) and simulations (Ya-zhou et al., 2022).
3.2 Microstructure evolution and phase transformation
In order to understand the atomic arrangement and to characterize the phase
transformation under tensile deformation, the detailed atomic information involving in
the phase transformation and evolution of structure in the three HEA systems at the
specific strain along the three loading directions are characterized respectively. The
number fractions of all the five elements joining the phase transformation process from
the original BCC to other structures are evaluated as shown in Figure 3. For the [001]-
oriented sample, the fractions of Hf, Ti and Zr atoms in FCC-type and HCP-type atoms
are three highest among the five elements, indicating that Hf, Ti and Zr atoms are the
three main elements in participating the transformation from BCC to FCC and HCP
phases during tensile loading. These atoms are mainly involved in the transition to
FCC phase at the preceding plastic deformation, and to HCP phase at the succeeding
plastic deformation. The refractory elements Hf, Ti and Zr are stable locally in FCC
structure and naturally in HCP phase at ambient conditions (Aguayo et al., 2002; von
Rohr et al., 2016). The volume of BCC phase is generally lower than that of HCP
phase from experimental observation (Huang et al., 2018). During tensile
deformation, the structure is elongated, and the distorted lattice becomes less dense,
which allows these atoms to move easily for BCC-FCC or BCC-HCP phase transitions.
The involvement of Hf, Ti and Zr atoms in the phase transformation has also been
observed from experiments and simulations (Wu et al., 2023). As calculated for the
[110]-oriented sample in Figure 3(c) and 3(d), Hf and Ti atoms are the main element
involving in the process of BCC-HCP phase transformation. This can be attributed to
the reason that Ti and Hf are fully soluble in each other and the BCC-HCP phase
transformation occurs at all concentrations (Yamabe-Mitarai et al., 2022). Similar to
the situation in the [110]-oriented sample, the phase transformations from BCC
structure to FCC and HCP-type atoms in the [111]-oriented sample are mainly induced
by Ti atoms as suggested in Figure 3(e) and 3(f).
Figure 2. The mechanical responses of HfNbTaTiZr HEAs: Stress-strain curves and the
fraction of various types of atomic structure under tensile deformation along (a)(b)
[001], (c)(d) [110] and (e)(f) [111] crystallographic orientations. The atomic structures
at different stages with respect of the stress-strain curves are captured, and the atoms
colored in blue, green and red represent those in BCC, FCC and HCP structures,
respectively. The peaks in the stress-strain curves are highlighted with brown lines,
indicating the corresponding fractions of atomic structure for visual guidance.
The corresponding evolution of BCC structure during deformation process for the
[001]-oriented sample is characterized in Figure 4. After the initiation of plastic
deformation, BCC-type atoms at random positions of the HEA system start to transform
to other structure type with increasing strain, and such transformation also complete
when the strain reaches 25%. Further increase of strain leads to the reappearance of
BCC structure, and the distribution of BCC-type atoms at this stage are similar to that
at the preceding stage, which can be contributed to the generation of second peak in the
stress-strain curve. The continuous loading induces the second phase transformation
from BCC to other atomic structures, causing the drop of stress.
Figure 3. The corresponding changes of atom number fraction for FCC and HCP
structures in the (a)(b) [001]-, (c)(d) [110]-, and (e)(f) [111]-oriented HEA models
during tensile deformation.
Figure 4. The evolution of BCC structure in the HfNbTaTiZr HEA model loaded along
[001] orientation at different stages.
Figure 5. The local structural evolution during deformation in the (a)(b) [001]-, (c)(d)
[110]- and (e)(f) [111]-oriented HfNbTaTiZr HEA systems.
Figure 6. Microstructural evolution during tensile deformation in [001]-oriented
HfNbTaTiZr HEA system. (a1)(b1)(c1)(d1) The atomic configurations of a local region
at different strains; the atoms colored in blue, green and red represent those in BCC,
FCC and HCP structures, respectively. (a2)(b2)(c2)(d2) the corresponding CSP,
(a3)(b3)(c3)(d3) the corresponding atomic displacement vector, and (a4)(b4)(c4)(d4)
the corresponding local shear strain. The color bars are the same in (a2)-(d2), and the
same in (a4)-(d4). In order to provide a clear view of the displacement vector, only
the atoms with the highest atom number fraction in FCC and HCP structures are
characterized (i.e. Hf element for [001]-oriented sample). The insets in (a1)-(d1)
indicate the zoom out of the whole HEA structure.
For the [110]-oriented sample, the phase transformation from BCC to HCP structure
appears after the yielding point, and the BCC phase region decrease in the band shape
with the increasing strain. The HCP phase starts to grow, and the phase boundary
between BCC and the other atomic structure is in a random shape as shown at the strain
of 12.5% in Figure 7(a). Unlike the situation in the [001]-oriented sample, the
structure of the whole system almost turns into HCP structure without the transition to
FCC structure. With further deformation, the stress decreases slowly with randomly
generated FCC and HCP structures. The BCC-type atoms continue to decrease and
are distributed in the HEA system in a disordered manner with fluctuated tensile stress,
as shown at the strain of 45% from Figure 7(a). It can also be seen that the interface
between the BCC structure and the region containing other type of atoms is highly
irregular and incoherent. Such amorphous arrangement without a clear separation
between different crystalline structures contributes to the plasticity and ductility of the
HEA system with specific crystallographic orientation. For the [111]-oriented sample,
the direct drop of the stress after the yielding point is mainly related to the phase
transformation from BCC-type to other type of atoms in random positions. Unlike the
case in the [110]-oriented sample, such phase transformation starts from some local
positions with the transition to HCP-type atoms. The BCC-type atoms start to
decrease in the band shape from the strain of 12.5%, and slowly turn into amorphous
state while keeping the band shape with increasing strain to 45%. Such amorphization
under extreme uniaxial tensile has been discovered in FCC HEA system previously
(Jiang et al., 2022). The hardening of the [110]- and [111]-oriented HEA system is
mainly affected by phase transformation from BCC to HCP structure as well as from
crystalline structure to amorphization transition. Such transformation-induced
hardening from BCC to HCP phase has been observed in TiZrHfVxNbxTax refractory
HEAs (Jung et al., 2021), and the amorphization transition in HEA under extreme
uniaxial tensile that leads to hardening behavior has been found from both experiments
and simulations (Jiang et al., 2022; Zhao et al., 2021).
Figure 7. The evolution of BCC structure in the HfNbTaTiZr HEA model loaded along
(a) [110] and (b) [111] orientation at different stages.
The microstructure evolution and phase transformation under tensile deformation for
[110]- and [111]-oriented samples are shown in Figure 8. As shown in Figure 8(a1)-
7(b4), the main phase transformation in [110]-oriented sample under tensile loading is
from BCC to HCP structure with a high value of CSP in HCP phase, which does not
trigger much local shear strain at the strain of 12.5% (see Figure 8(a2) and 8(a4)). The
atoms almost keep the original atomic alignment with random atomic displacement.
Further increase of tensile strain leads to strong lattice distortion and disordered atomic
arrangement. The local shear strain increases when the amorphous regions start to
form, and is mainly concentrated in these regions, which is clearly demonstrated at the
strain of 25% (see Figure 8(b2) and 8(b4)). The increase of strain leads to the random
movement of atoms, suggesting the initiation of amorphous state formed by FCC- and
BCC-type atoms. The atoms in the random motion directions affect the movement of
surrounding atoms, causing the enlargement of disordered atomic arrangement. It is
noted from Figure 8(b3) that the atomic movement show inconspicuous localized
directionality in the amorphous region as highlighted in the yellow box.
For the [111]-oriented sample, the detailed atomic arrangement in the specified region
captured in Figure 8(c1) display a formed band shape of mainly HCP-type atoms in
amorphous region under tensile loading, which affects the plasticity of this HEA system.
The large lattice distortion appears at the region formed by HCP-type atoms with high
local shear strain. The atomic displacement characterized in Figure 8(c3) shows an
interesting result. The atoms inside the amorphous region move in a random manner,
while the atoms move directionally and oppositely around the phase boundaries
between BCC-type and HCP-type atoms at the strain of 12.5%, suggesting that such
process of phase transformation is caused by the relative interlayer slip. These atoms
affect the motion of surrounding atoms, causing the enlargement of the amorphous
region with increasing strain. The movement of these atoms then turns to several
vortex-like motions in the region with disordered atomic arrangement at the strain of
25%. Such vortex-like motions with certain flow direction cause larger lattice
distortion in the system, causing the enlargement of amorphous bands. Affected by
the vortex-like atomic displacement, the corresponding shear strain are still
concentrated in the amorphous bands within the HEA system, and remain in these
regions even when most of the system turns into amorphous state as can be seen from
the local shear strain map in Figure 8(d4). Therefore, the phase transformation can be
manipulated by loading in the corresponding crystallographic orientation for better
combination of strength-ductility properties in alloy processing.
Slip systems
Orientation in BCC Mode of Schmid
single crystal Failure factor
Slip Slip
plane direction
{111} <110> Dislocation 0.408
[001] {112} <111> Twinning 0.471
{123} <111> Dislocation 0.463
{110} <111> Dislocation 0.408
[110] {112} <111> Twinning 0.236
{123} <111> Dislocation 0.154
{110} <111> Dislocation 0.272
[111] {112} <111> Twinning 0.314
{123} <111> Dislocation 0.103
Table 1 Schmid factors for several slip systems in BCC HEA samples along [001], [110]
and [111] loading directions. Here, the common slip systems have been selected based
on experimental observation (Charpagne et al., 2022).
To better understand the phase transformation mechanism, the BCC, FCC and HCP
structures obtained in the MD simulations are zoomed and taken out for analysis.
Figure 9 and Figure 10 give the evolution of phase transformation from BCC structure
to FCC structure in the [001]-oriented sample and to HCP structure in the [111]-oriented
sample. The sudden increase of FCC structure at about 20% under uniaxial tensile
loading along [001] direction in Figure 2(b) indicates that there exists a preferred
orientation for the occurrence of BCC-FCC phase transformation. According to the
Bain model, the BCC phase can transform into FCC phase when being uniaxially
stretched along <100> direction (Krasko and Olson, 1989). In the [001]-oriented
sample, the lattice deformation is triggered under tensile loading, and the lattice
constant with the initial value of 0.34 nm starts to decrease (see Figure 9(a) and 9(b)),
while slowly increases along the [001] direction accordingly. The atoms continue to
move until the ratio of the lattice constants along the three directions reaches a certain
value and satisfies the condition for the formation of FCC structure. Such BCC-FCC
phase transformation under ultrahigh stretching tensile stress has been observed in Nb
nanowires (Wang et al., 2018). The involved atoms undergo a slight movement and
rotation during the phase transformation process, as shown in Figure 9(c). The
diffusion coefficient is affected by applied stress and changes with strain. Phase
transformation is governed by atomic diffusion. The rate of change of the diffusion
coefficient with strain is related to the interatomic forces, and such relation can be
interpreted in terms of the interatomic potential-energy functions of the material system
between the diffusion coefficient and the applied stress (Girifalco and Grimes, 1961).
The diffusion coefficients for individual elements are calculated based on the measured
velocity auto-correlation function (VACF) in Figure 9(d). The VACF is defined by
the scalar product of the velocity vectors of a diffusing atom during dynamical process,
and its time-integral is proportional to the diffusion coefficient. The instantaneous
VACF value for each atom is measured during MD simulations. Therefore, the time-
dependent diffusion coefficient D(t) is calculated by integrating the VACF over the
simulation time and divide it by the number of degrees of freedom, which is expressed
as:
1
D ( t ) = v ( 0 ) v ( t ) dt
d0
where d is the dimensionality of the space, v is the velocity vector of each atom, and
t is the time. Diffusion coefficient helps to describe the diffusion related phenomena
such as stress induced diffusion and phase transformation during tensile deformation.
The change of diffusion coefficient can reveal the main contributing element for the
deformation-induced phase transformation.
The diffusion coefficients of all the elements keep in a relatively low value at the strain
from 0 to 15%, suggesting that the phase transformation is mainly caused by the lattice
distortion. In the [111]-oriented sample, the original symmetry of BCC structure is
more likely to transform into trigonal symmetry of hexagonal lattice. The crystalline
lattice originally featured in BCC structure (see Figure 10(a)) changes into the state in
HCP structure (see Figure 10(b)). The involved atoms move almost linearly when
BCC structure evolves into HCP structure as shown in Figure 10(c). The diffusion
coefficients of Hf, Ti and Zr atoms keep in a relatively high value starting from the
strain of around 10% as illustrated in Figure 10(d), suggesting that the phase
transformation is mainly governed by the atomic diffusion. It should be noted that
diffusivity is affected by the melting point, the thermodynamic factor and the atomic
mobility (Liu et al., 2022; Zhang et al., 2022). The Zr diffusion is temperature
dependent following a linear Arrhenius-type behavior, and its improvement can be
contributed from lattice distortions (Zhang et al., 2022). The calculations using
ThermoCalc show that Zr and Hf have higher intrinsic diffusion coefficients than Ta in
several orders of magnitude at high temperature ranging from 1100 oC to 1250 oC (Liu
et al., 2022).
Figure 9. Schematic diagram of the mechanism of phase transformation (a) from BCC
structure to (b) FCC structure along [001] direction during tensile deformation, and the
green dashed lines in the crystal structure indicate the formed FCC structure after the
phase transformation; (c) The trajectories of selected atoms in the loading process from
(a) to (b), which are colored by grey lines, and the atoms colored in red, blue and green
represent Hf, Nb and Zr elements respectively; (d) The corresponding diffusion
coefficients for individual element in the [001]-oriented HEA model.
Figure 10. Schematic diagram of the mechanism of phase transformation (a) from BCC
structure to (b) HCP structure along [111] direction during tensile deformation, and the
red dashed lines in the crystal structure indicate the formed HCP structure after the
phase transformation; (c) The trajectories of selected atoms in the loading process from
(a) to (b), which are colored by grey lines, and the atoms colored in red, blue, yellow
and pink represent Hf, Nb, Ta and Ti elements respectively; (d) The corresponding
diffusion coefficients for individual element in the [111]-oriented HEA model.
The evolution of the energy in the HEA systems are calculated accordingly to analyze
energy barriers for the phase transformation. To perform the calculations, the groups
of atoms that change from BCC to FCC structure in the [001]-oriented sample and from
BCC to HCP structures in the [111]-oriented sample are selected. The evolution of
the average energy of these atoms during phase transformation in the deformation
process are calculated as shown in Figure 11. The equilibrium values at the initial
stage are -3.24 eV/atom for [001]-oriented sample and -3.42 eV/atom for [111]-oriented
sample. As the tensile deformation proceeds, the energy gradually increases as a
result of the strain energy. As the external strain further increases to 15% in the [001]-
oriented sample, a peak value of -3.18 eV/atom in the energy can be seen, which
corresponds to the almost completion of the phase transformation from BCC to FCC
structure as shown by the snapshot in Figure 11(a). The corresponding energy barrier
of the BCC to FCC structure transformation is ∼60 meV/atom. The peak value in the
[111]-oriented sample is -3.39 eV/atom, showing the initiation of phase transformation
as shown in Figure 11(b). The corresponding energy barrier for the BCC to HCP
structure transformation is ~25 meV/atom, which is lower than that for the BCC to FCC
structure transformation in [001]-oriented sample. Therefore, the BCC structure is
more easily transformed to HCP structure in the [111]-oriented HEA system under
extreme tensile loading condition. Compared to the energy difference of the ground
state and different structures from first-principles calculations from this study (see
Supplementary Information) and another reference (Chen et al., 2022), both values are
reasonable. The results indicate that the phase transformation is sensitive to the
crystallographic orientation. The higher energy barrier in the [001]-oriented sample
is due to more atoms involved in the transformation from BCC phase to FCC phase in
the initial plastic stage as shown in Figure 2(a). BCC phase is found to prefer to
transform into FCC phase through the Bain model when the BCC phase is uniaxially
stretched along [001] direction (Xie et al., 2021). It has been observed from
experiments that FCC phase is soft with relatively low strength while BCC phase is
hard with strain-hardening ability (He et al., 2014; Qin et al., 2019). This is because
FCC phase has more slip systems and thus deforms easier than BCC phase. During
the BCC to FCC phase transformation under tensile deformation, the structure loses its
stability and becomes more sensitive to the stress, leading to the drop of the tensile
strength along [001] orientation.
Figure 11. Energy evolution of the selected region during phase transformation. The
energy barriers are ∼60 meV/atom from BCC to FCC structure in the [001]-oriented
sample, and ∼25 meV/atom from BCC to HCP structure in the [111]-oriented sample.
The blue, green and red colors indicate atoms belonging to BCC, FCC and HCP
structures, respectively.
4. Conclusions
In this study, the mechanical responses and phase transition mechanism of HfNbTaTiZr
HEAs in different crystallographic orientations under uniaxial tensile deformation have
been investigated using MD simulations under the assumption of dislocation-free
samples and no multiplication features. The simulation results reveal that the
mechanical properties are orientation-dependent with the highest Young’s modulus
observed along with the [111] crystallographic orientation. The characterization of
microstructure evolution demonstrates that the deformation twinning, dislocation
process and phase transformation are affected by the crystallographic orientation with
respect to the loading direction. The crystal structure mainly transforms from BCC
phase into FCC or HCP phase as the tensile strain increases during the plastic
deformation, which is in consistence with experimental observations. In detail, the
atoms maintain their initial BCC structure during the elastic deformation. With the
further increase of tensile strain, the phase transformation undergoes different stages,
including the occurrence, growth and disappearance of BCC, FCC and HCP structures
in different HEA systems, resulting in diverse mechanical responses. The sudden drop
of the stress after reaching the yield stress in the [001]-oriented sample is caused by the
phase transition from BCC to FCC and HCP structures. The phase transformation
from BCC to HCP structure are strongly correlated to the strength and plasticity for the
[111]-oriented sample. In addition, the corresponding energy barrier needed for such
transformation from BCC to FCC or HCP is analyzed. These findings provide an
atomistic insight for comprehending the mechanical response of HfNbTaTiZr refractory
HEAs in high-strain-rate loading conditions, and serve as a valuable reference for
strengthening strategies in alloy design and the application of refractory HEA system
under extreme environments.
Acknowledgement
The authors are grateful to the support from the National Natural Science Foundation
of China (22108316 and 12302179), Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province
(LY24E010001) and Ningbo Municipal Natural Science Foundation (No. 2023J102).
The authors are also thankful to Prof. F.H. Zhou and Prof. R.J. Jiang for their fruitful
discussions.
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Author statement
Wei Jian: Conceptualization, Formal analysis, Methodology, Software, Validation,
Visualization, Writing-Original Draft, Funding acquisition.
Lu Ren: Formal analysis, Resources, Investigation, Writing- Review & Editing,
Funding acquisition.
Declaration of interests
☒ The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or
personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this
paper.
☐ The authors declare the following financial interests/personal relationships which may