학술논문

Design, synthesis, structure, and stability of novel multi-principal element (Ti,Zr,Hf,W)C ceramic with a miscibility gap
Document Type
Source
Journal of the European Ceramic Society. 42(11):4429-4435
Subject
Carbide
Computational thermodynamics
Mechanical properties
Miscibility gap
Multi-principal element
Carbides
Fracture toughness
Lamellar structures
Phase separation
Spark plasma sintering
Thermodynamics
Titanium compounds
Carbide systems
Computational tools
Design stability
Design structure
Design synthesis
Rich phase
Single phasis
Solubility
Language
English
ISSN
0955-2219
1873-619X
Abstract
Here we design a novel multi-principal element carbide system (Ti,Zr,Hf,W)C with a miscibility gap using computational tools and report on the formation of a single-phase (Ti,Zr,Hf,W)C after spark plasma sintering. The (Ti,Zr,Hf,W)C shows high nanohardness (32.7 GPa) and fracture toughness (5 MPa·m1/2). Aging studies at 1350 °C for 100 h show that the single-phase carbide solid solution is quite stable even though this temperature is within the predicted miscibility gap of the system. Detailed electron microscopy characterization shows that phase separation has initiated with minor decomposition after aging by forming rock-salt (Ti,W)C- and (Zr,Hf)C-rich phases as well as hexagonal WC precipitates. We show that the (Ti,W)C- and (Zr,Hf)C-rich phases form a lamellar structure upon aging and the interlamellar spacing is considerably coarser than what has been previously found for the binary (Ti,Zr)C system. The decomposition kinetics, on the other hand, is sluggish due to the reduced driving force for phase decomposition.