Transcending the MAX phases concept of nanolaminated early transition metal carbides/nitrides -- the ZIA phases

Abstract

A new potential class of nanolaminated and structurally complex materials, herein conceived as the Zigzag IntermetAllic (ZIA) phases, is proposed. A study of the constituent phases of a specific Nb--Si--Ni intermetallic alloy revealed that its ternary H-phase, i.e., the Nb3SiNi2 intermetallic compound (IMC), is a crystalline solid with the close-packed fcc Bravais lattice, the 312 MAX phase stoichiometry and a layered atomic arrangement that may define an entire class of nanolaminated IMCs analogous to the nanolaminated ceramic compounds known today as the MAX phases. The electron microscopy investigation of the Nb3SiNi2 compound -- the first candidate ZIA phase -- revealed a remarkable structural complexity, as its ordered unit cell is made of 96 atoms. The ZIA phases extend the concept of nanolaminated crystalline solids well beyond the MAX phases family of early transition metal carbides/nitrides, most likely broadening the spectrum of achievable material properties into domains typically not covered by the MAX phases. Furthermore, this work uncovers that both families of nanolaminated crystalline solids, i.e., the herein introduced fcc ZIA phases and all known variants of the hcp MAX phases, obey the same overarching stoichiometric rule Px+yAxNy, where x and y are integers ranging from 1 to 6.

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