English

Visualizing Temperature-Dependent Phase Stability in High Entropy Alloys

Materials Science 2021-04-20 v2

Abstract

High Entropy Alloys (HEAs) contain near equimolar amounts of five or more elements and are a compelling space for materials design. Great emphasis is placed on identifying HEAs that form a homogeneous solid-solution, but the design of such HEAs is hindered by the difficulty of navigating stability relationships in high-component spaces. Traditional phase diagrams use barycentric coordinates to represent composition axes, which require D = (N - 1) spatial dimensions to represent an N-component system, meaning that HEA systems with N > 4 components cannot be readily visualized. Here, we propose forgoing barycentric composition axes in favor of two energy axes: a formation-energy axis and a 'reaction energy' axis. These Inverse Hull Webs offer an information-dense 2D representation that successfully capture complex phase stability relationships in N > 4 component systems. We use our new diagrams to visualize the transition of HEA solid-solutions from high-temperature stability to metastability upon quenching, and identify important thermodynamic features that are correlated with the persistence or decomposition of metastable HEAs.

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2011.14446,
  title  = {Visualizing Temperature-Dependent Phase Stability in High Entropy Alloys},
  author = {Daniel Evans and Jiadong Chen and Geoffroy Hautier and Wenhao Sun},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2011.14446},
  year   = {2021}
}

Comments

18 pages, 5 figures

R2 v1 2026-06-23T20:34:56.860Z