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Bioinspired hierarchical microstructures offer a route toward engineered fatigue resistance in additively manufactured alloys. However, it remains unclear how discrete structural constituents independently govern damage accumulation, particularly during the critical fatigue initiation regime where short cracks strongly interact with local microstructure. Here, we investigate multiscale fatigue initiation in a dual-phase, nanolamellar AlCoCrFeNi 2.1 high-entropy alloy. By comparing microscale specimens that isolate the nanolamellar structure against macroscale specimens containing the full melt-pool architecture, we identify size-dependent fatigue initiation mechanisms. We find that failure is dictated by nanolamellar interfaces at the microscale, whereas mesoscale melt pool boundaries serve to initiate fatigue at the macroscale. This mechanistic shift is accompanied by a transition from macroscale quasi-brittle failure to microscale plasticity-driven crack extension. Our results provide a physical framework for understanding how structural hierarchy governs the transition from discrete microstructural deformation to continuum fatigue fracture behavior, informing the design of damage-tolerant, additively manufactured alloys.
Capaldi et al. (Fri,) studied this question.