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A Proposed Method for the Computer-aided Discovery and Design of High-strength, Ductile Metals

Abstract

Gum Metal, a class of Ti-Nb alloys, has generated a great deal of interest in the metallurgical community since its development in 2003. These alloys display numerous novel and anomalous properties, many of which only occur after severe plastic deformation has been incurred on the material. Such properties include: super-elasticity, super-coldworkability, Invar and Elinvar behavior, high ductility, as well as high strength. The high strength of gum metal has generated particular enthusiasm as it is on the order of the predicted ideal strength of the material. Many of the properties of gum metal appear to be a direct result of tuning the composition to be near an elastic instability resulting in a high degree of elastic anisotropy. This presents an opportunity for the computer-aided discovery and design of structural materials as the ideal strength and elastic anisotropy can be approximated from the elastic constants. Two approaches are described for searching for this high ansitropy. In the first, The possibility of forming gum metal in Mg is explored by tuning the material to be near the BCC-HCP transition either by pressure or alloying with Li. The second makes use of the Materials Project's elastic constants database, which contains thousands of ordered compounds, in order to screen for gum metal candidates. By defining an elastic anisotropy parameter consistent with the behavior of gum metal and calculating it for all cubic materials in the elastic constants database several gum metal candidates are found. In order to better assess their candidacy information on the intrinsic ductility of these materials is necessary. A method is proposed for calculating the ideal strength and deformation mode of a solid solution from first-principles. In order to validate this method the intrinsic ductile-to-brittle transition composition of Ti-V systems is calculated. It is further shown that this method can be applied to the calculation of an ideal tensile yield surface.

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