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Keywords = Mg-3Al-xGe alloy

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12 pages, 2300 KiB  
Article
First-Principles Study on the Cu/Fe Interface Properties of Ternary Cu-Fe-X Alloys
by Yufei Wang, Min Li, Haiyan Gao, Jun Wang and Baode Sun
Materials 2020, 13(14), 3112; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma13143112 - 13 Jul 2020
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 3178
Abstract
The supersaturated Fe in Cu is known to reduce the electrical conductivity of Cu severely. However, the precipitation kinetics of Fe from Cu are sluggish. Alloying is one of the effective ways to accelerate the aging precipitation of Cu-Fe alloys. Nucleation plays an [...] Read more.
The supersaturated Fe in Cu is known to reduce the electrical conductivity of Cu severely. However, the precipitation kinetics of Fe from Cu are sluggish. Alloying is one of the effective ways to accelerate the aging precipitation of Cu-Fe alloys. Nucleation plays an important role in the early stage of aging. The interface property of Cu/γ–Fe is a key parameter in understanding the nucleation mechanism of γ-Fe, which can be obviously affected with the addition of alloying elements. In this paper, first principles calculations were carried out to investigate the influence of alloying elements on the interface properties, including the geometric optimizations, interfacial energy, work of adhesion and electronic structure. Based on the previous research, 14 elements including B, Si, P, Al, Ge, S, Mg, Ag, Cd, Sn, In, Sb, Zr and Bi were selected for investigation. Results showed that all these alloying elements tend to concentrate in the Cu matrix with the specific substitution position of the atoms determined by the binding energy between Fe and alloy element (X). The bonding strength of the Cu/γ-Fe interface will decrease obviously after adding Ag, Mg and Cd, while a drop in interfacial energy of Cu/γ–Fe will happen when alloyed with Al, B, S, P, Si, Ge, Sn, Zr, Bi, Sb and In. Further study of the electronic structure found that Al and Zr were not effective alloying elements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Materials Physics)
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10 pages, 3142 KiB  
Article
Corrosion Behavior of the As-Cast and As-Solid Solution Mg-Al-Ge Alloy
by Xiaoda Liu, Ming Yin, Shaohua Zhang, Huan Wei, Baosheng Liu, Huayun Du, Lifeng Hou and Yinghui Wei
Materials 2018, 11(10), 1812; https://doi.org/10.3390/ma11101812 - 24 Sep 2018
Cited by 10 | Viewed by 3031
Abstract
The corrosion behavior of Mg-3Al-xGe (x = 1, 3, 5) alloy in as-cast and as-solid was investigated by virtue of microstructure, corrosion morphology observation, and electrochemical measurement. Among the as-cast alloys, the corrosion rate of Mg-3Al-1Ge with a discontinuous bar-morphology [...] Read more.
The corrosion behavior of Mg-3Al-xGe (x = 1, 3, 5) alloy in as-cast and as-solid was investigated by virtue of microstructure, corrosion morphology observation, and electrochemical measurement. Among the as-cast alloys, the corrosion rate of Mg-3Al-1Ge with a discontinuous bar-morphology was the highest, which was 101.7 mm·a−1; the corrosion rate of Mg-3Al-3Ge with a continuous network distribution was the lowest, which was 23.1 mm·a−1; and the corrosion rate of Mg-3Al-5Ge of Ge-enriched phase with sporadic distribution was in-between, which was 63.9 mm·a−1. It is suggested that the morphology of the Mg2Ge phase changes with a change in Ge content, which affects the corrosion performance of the alloy. After solid solution treatment, the corrosion rate of the corresponding solid solution alloy increased—Mg-3Al-1Ge to 140.5 mm·a−1, Mg-3Al-3Ge to 52.9 mm·a−1, and Mg-3Al-5Ge to 87.3 mm·a−1, respectively. After investigation of the microstructure, it can be suggested that solid solution treatment dissolves the Mg17Al12 phase, which changes the phase composition of the alloy and also affects its microstructure, thus affecting its corrosion performance. Full article
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