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Scientists create 'super alloy' that rewrites century of alloy design

Xinhua | Updated: 2026-06-21 11:35

MELBOURNE - Scientists have transformed metal manufacturing by using lower temperatures and slower heating to control how atoms organize themselves during material production, in a discovery that could rewrite a century of alloy design.

The study finds that lower, slower heating can produce alloys twice as strong as steel and the same alloy made by conventional methods, and three times stronger than aluminum, according to a statement recently released by Australia's Monash University.

The findings, published in Science, showed that slower, lower-temperature heating allows atoms to self-organize into a highly ordered, interconnected "atomic architecture," without the microscopic defects found in conventional alloys.

Researchers from Australia, China and the United States tested the method on an alloy of titanium, hafnium, tantalum, niobium and zirconium, forming a tightly connected nanostructure that achieved a compressive yield strength above two gigapascals while remaining able to bend without breaking.

The approach could allow stronger, more efficient and sustainable materials to be produced with fewer alloying elements, with potential applications in aerospace, energy and advanced manufacturing, the researchers said.

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