Cui Jian, Zheng Xingwei, Bao Weichao, Liu Ji-Xuan, Xu Fangfang, Zhang Guo-Jun, Liang Yongcheng
College of Science, Institute of Functional Materials, and State Key Laboratory for Modification of Chemical Fibers and Polymer Materials, Donghua University, Shanghai 201620, China.
State Key Laboratory of High Performance Ceramics and Superfine Microstructure, Shanghai Institute of Ceramics, Shanghai 200050, China.
Nano Lett. 2023 Oct 25;23(20):9319-9325. doi: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.3c02506. Epub 2023 Oct 3.
High electrical conductivity and super high hardness are two sought-after material properties, but both are contradictory because the effective suppression of dislocation movement generally increases the scattering of conducting electrons. Here we synthesized a high-entropy dodecaboride composite (HEDC) with a large number of atomic-scale interlocking layers. It shows a Vickers hardness of 51.2 ± 3.6 GPa under an applied load of 0.49 N and an electrical resistivity of 44.5 μΩ·cm at room temperature. Such HEDC achieves superhardness by inheriting the high intrinsic hardness of its constituent phases and restricting the dislocation motion to further enhance the extrinsic hardness through forming numerous atom-scale interlocks between different slip systems. Moreover, the HEDC maintains the excellent electrical conductivity of the constituent borides, and the competition between two correlating structures produces the special kind of coherent boundary that minimizes the scattering of conducting electrons and does not largely deteriorate the electrical conductivity.