Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1448357 Acta Materialia 2008 9 Pages PDF
Abstract

The effect of HIP’ping on plastic anisotropy of a Ni-based superalloy was studied. The orientation dependence of tensile properties was evaluated experimentally at room temperature at a nominal strain rate of 10−3 s−1. The results indicate that HIP’ping eliminates the non-Schmid effect by increasing the strength of the 〈1 1 1〉 loaded samples. This phenomenon is attributed to the influence of stress fields of pores and eutectic pools on the yielding behavior of the 〈1 1 1〉 loaded samples, whose deformation is confined to the γ-channels. When deformation takes place by the shearing of γ′-particles, the softening effect dominates and the presence of discontinuities has less or no effect on the deformation path. A new plastic anisotropy was discovered in this work. It is shown that the tensile properties along the primary dendrite growth ([0 0 1] orientation) is significantly different than along the secondary dendrite growth direction ([1 0 0] orientation).

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Ceramics and Composites
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