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Tuning Eutectic High Entropy Alloy Microstructures: The Role of Consolidation and Particle Size Distribution in EHEA AlCoCrFeNi2.1

  • Daniel Guerrero*
  • , Rita Carbajales
  • , Miguel A. Monclus
  • , José Antonio Calero
  • , Luis Antonio Díaz
  • , Miguel Ángel Lagos
  • , Mónica Campos
  • , Paula Alvaredo
  • *Autor correspondiente de este trabajo
  • Instituto IMDEA Materiales
  • AMES PM Tech Centre
  • University of Oviedo

Producción científica: Contribución a una revistaArtículorevisión exhaustiva

Resumen

Eutectic alloys stand out for their ability to combine high strength and good ductility; a behaviour rooted in their characteristic two-phase microstructure—lamellar or globular—formed at a constant solidification temperature that minimizes segregation and suppresses brittle phases. Their low interfacial energy limits microcrack propagation, while interfacial sliding and dislocation blocking at phase boundaries enhance both strength and toughness. In this work, we investigate how controlled microstructural modifications influence the behaviour of the eutectic high-entropy alloy AlCoCrFeNi2.1, composed of B2 (Ni–Al-rich) and L12 (Co–Fe–Ni-rich) phases. Because these phases exhibit distinct mechanical responses, microconstituent morphology becomes a design parameter. Powder metallurgy is the only processing route capable of providing the level of microstructural control required in this study. It preserves the rapidly solidified eutectic architecture of gas-atomised powders while allowing its intentional transformation during consolidation. Two strategies were implemented: (i) tuning the thermal–electrical input in Spark Plasma Sintering (SPS) and Electrical Resistance Sintering (ERS), and (ii) engineering the particle size distribution, including a bimodal design that enhances surface-energy-driven morphological transitions. SPS enables a gradual lamellar-to-globular evolution, whereas ERS induces ultrafast transformations governed by current intensity. The bimodal PSD significantly accelerates globularisation at lower energy input. EBSD-KAM (Electron Backscatter Diffraction—Kernel Average Misorientation) mapping identifies the lamellar B2 phase as metastable and highly strained, while globular B2 domains show reduced dislocation density. Nanoindentation confirms that intrinsic phase properties remain unchanged, whereas microhardness scales with morphology and lamellar spacing. These results demonstrate that the macroscopic mechanical response is governed by microstructure, establishing powder metallurgy as a uniquely powerful pathway for microstructure-driven design in eutectic HEAs.

Idioma originalInglés
Número de artículo302
PublicaciónMetals
Volumen16
N.º3
DOI
EstadoPublicada - mar 2026

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