Achieving high oxygen tolerance in Ti6Al4V: Copper-oxygen co-doping strategy for ultrahigh strength-ductility balance

Hongqiang Duan, Hongmei Zhang*, Xingwang Cheng, Xiaonan Mu, Qunbo Fan, Ying Zhang, Ni Xiong, Ke Feng, Yu Wang, Xuexia Li, Taotao Cai, Kefan Zheng

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Conventional α + β Ti6Al4V alloys lack sufficient strengthening mechanisms, limiting strength. While oxygen (O) offers a cost-effective strengthening route, exceeding ∼ 0.33 wt% causes significant embrittlement. Here, we explored how to efficiently utilize interstitial oxygen to enhance the mechanical properties of Ti6Al4V. The copper oxide (CuO) was innovatively employed as a precursor to completely dissolve into Ti6Al4V matrix, interstitial O and substitutional Cu atoms were simultaneously utilized to strengthen the primary α-phase (αp) while inducing the abundant secondary-α (αs) nanoprecipitates. Surprisingly, the introduction of Cu element facilitated control of lattice distortion and redistributed oxygen between αp and β-transformed (βtrans) structure, resulting in the Ti6Al4V-2.5CuO (wt.%) alloy with high oxygen tolerance (0.62 wt%) and an ultra-high ultimate strength of ∼ 1635 MPa and a favorable ductility of ∼ 5.3 %. The dual effect of interstitial solid solution strengthening and αs precipitation strengthening were achieved under the Cu/O interaction. Additionally, the addition of Cu promoted the oxygen redistribution and activation of the basal < a > and pyramidal < c + a > slip systems, thereby ensuring improved ductility. This study presented a novel strategy for high-strength Ti alloys using interstitial oxygen, maximizing strengthening while mitigating embrittlement.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114719
JournalMaterials and Design
Volume259
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Nov 2025

Keywords

  • Copper oxide
  • Deformation mechanisms
  • Mechanical properties
  • Microstructure evolution
  • Ti alloys

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