Nanostructured metallic materials are widely applied in various fields due to their excellent comprehensive properties. Enhancing mechanical properties through microstructure design has emerged as a novel strengthening strategy. In this contribution, the microscopic mechanical behavior of coarse-grained and gradient-structured nanocrystalline NiCoAl alloys during tensile deformation was investigated via molecular dynamics simulations. Based on the investigation of compositional effects, the Ni60Co30Al10 alloy composition was selected, exhibiting a yield strength of 4.92 GPa. The results indicate that increasing Al content reduces the material’s strength, Young’s modulus, and work hardening effect. Furthermore, by introducing a gradient structure with grain sizes gradually varying from 1.8 nm to 6.5 nm into the alloy, the yield strength reaches 1.8 GPa and the flow stress reaches 3.35 GPa, demonstrating a significant improvement compared to the uniform coarse-grained structure. Upon introducing the gradient structure into the alloy, it was observed that geometrically necessary dislocations (GNDs) nucleate in the coarse-grained region during deformation and gradually extend towards the fine-grained region. The increased grain boundary density effectively impedes dislocation motion and enhances dislocation pinning capability, thereby inducing continuous strain hardening and improving plasticity. By promoting the accumulation and interaction of grain boundary dislocations, the gradient structure achieves further strengthening and strain hardening in the alloy, providing a theoretical basis and simulation foundation for designing high-performance advanced alloys.
Zheng et al. (Mon,) studied this question.