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A highly distorted ultraelastic chemically complex Elinvar alloy.

Quanfeng HeJ G WangHsin-An ChenZ Y DingZ Q ZhouL H XiongJ H LuanJ M PelletierJ C QiaoQ WangL L FanYang RenQiaoshi ZengChain Tsuan LiuChun-Wei PaoDavid J SrolovitzYong Yang
Published in: Nature (2022)
The development of high-performance ultraelastic metals with superb strength, a large elastic strain limit and temperature-insensitive elastic modulus (Elinvar effect) are important for various industrial applications, from actuators and medical devices to high-precision instruments 1,2 . The elastic strain limit of bulk crystalline metals is usually less than 1 per cent, owing to dislocation easy gliding. Shape memory alloys 3 -including gum metals 4,5 and strain glass alloys 6,7 -may attain an elastic strain limit up to several per cent, although this is the result of pseudo-elasticity and is accompanied by large energy dissipation 3 . Recently, chemically complex alloys, such as 'high-entropy' alloys 8 , have attracted tremendous research interest owing to their promising properties 9-15 . In this work we report on a chemically complex alloy with a large atomic size misfit usually unaffordable in conventional alloys. The alloy exhibits a high elastic strain limit (approximately 2 per cent) and a very low internal friction (less than 2 × 10 -4 ) at room temperature. More interestingly, this alloy exhibits an extraordinary Elinvar effect, maintaining near-constant elastic modulus between room temperature and 627 degrees Celsius (900 kelvin), which is, to our knowledge, unmatched by the existing alloys hitherto reported.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
  • ionic liquid
  • human health
  • healthcare
  • health risk
  • risk assessment