Hence, engineers are investigating a new class of materials called refractory high-entropy alloys (RHEAs), many of which have melting temperatures above 3500 F. Under Phase 1 of the Advanced ...
Looking ahead, the versatility of this one-step process opens up new possibilities. Since iron, nickel, copper, and cobalt can all be processed this way, high-entropy alloys could be the next focus.
Metalysis expands its Gen 1 research capabilities by installing three new research units. Find out how Metalysis is meeting the demand from advanced industries like hypersonics and space exploration.
UMass Amherst Ph.D. student Jie Ren holds a miniature heatsink fan, one of the 3D printed high-entropy alloy components made in Wen Chen’s lab. The microstructure’s atomic rearrangement gives ...