Nanostructuring of an additively manufactured CoCrFeNi multi-principal element alloy
using severe plastic deformation: Comparison of two materials processed by different
laser scan speeds
Experiments were conducted to reveal the refinement of the microstructure and the
evolution of the hardness of an additively manufactured (AM) CoCrFeNi multi-principal
element alloy (MPEA) processed by severe plastic deformation (SPD) using high pressure
torsion (HPT) technique. AM was carried out by laser powder bed fusion (L-PBF) technique
at two different laser scan speeds. The as-built alloys for both laser scan speeds
have a single-phase face-centered cubic (fcc) structure with <110> fiber texture parallel
to the building direction. X-ray line profile analysis (XLPA) revealed that the dislocation
density was considerably high even in the AM-processed state before HPT (3 × 1014
m 2) which increased by two orders of magnitude during HPT. The saturation of the
lattice defects (dislocation density and twin fault probability) as well as the crystallite
size occurred at a shear strain of about 10 during HPT. In both AM-processed alloys,
<111> fiber texture developed parallel to the normal of the HPT-processed disks. For
both laser scan speeds, the initial grain size in the AM-processed samples was refined
from 70 to 90 μm to the nanocrystalline regime after 10 turns of HPT. Additionally,
nanotwins formed with a probability of about 3 %. The initial hardness of the AM-processed
MPEA samples for both laser scan speeds was 2700–2800 MPa, which is superior to that
of CoCrFeNi produced by casting (about 1380 MPa). This can be explained by the high
dislocation density in the AM-processed specimens. The formation of nano-structure
with high lattice defect density during HPT resulted in a very high hardness value
of about 5500 MPa in the AM-processed CoCrFeNi MPEA samples for both laser scan speeds.