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Ternary Au-Cu-Pt alloys, of unequal gold and copper atomic contents and containing 2.5 wt.% Pt, are ordered isothermally at 250 or 400 degrees C after annealing at 650 degrees C and quenching in water. The alloys are characterized by transmission electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction, hardness and tensile testing. With 75 and 76.5 wt.% Au, the microstructural evolution depends on the ordering temperature. At 400 degrees C, a classical nanotwinned "polytwin" structure with, locally, two L1(0) crystal orientation variants is formed; this evolves into a two-phase, L1(0) + Al, checkerboard-like microstructure after 10(6) s. At 250 degrees C, ordering develops a stable (up to 10(5) s) structure locally containing all three L1(0) crystal variants arranged in a network of {1 1 0} twins roughly 30 nm wide. At both ordering temperatures the 78 wt.% Au alloy develops a similar three-variant nanotwinned structure that also remains stable up to 10(5) s. The 75 and 76.5 wt.% Au alloys display a peak in hardness after roughly 120 s at both 400 degrees C and 250 degrees C; with 78 wt.% Au, peak hardness is not reached at 10(5) s. With all three alloys, superior hardness and tensile strength, coupled with lower ductility, are obtained with the three-variant nanotwinned structure formed at 250 degrees C compared with the more classical polytwin structure that develops at 400 degrees C. (C) 2011 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Roland Logé, Cyril Cayron, Margaux Nathalie Dominique Larcher