Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1561074 Computational Materials Science 2014 4 Pages PDF
Abstract

•The γ/γ′ diffusion mobility in a nickel-based superalloy is estimated.•Microstructure evolution during creep is simulated by the phase-field method.•Microstructure-dependent heterogeneous creep in the γ matrix phase is simulated.•Directional coarsening of the γ′ precipitate (rafting) is reproduced.•Simulated macroscopic creep response is consistent with previous experimental data.

The diffusion mobility associated with γ/γ′ interface migration (γ/γ′ diffusion mobility) in a nickel-based superalloy is estimated on the basis of the database of multicomponent atomic diffusion mobility. The estimation is based on the assumption that the phase equilibrium is reached during high-temperature creep, and that the γ/γ′ interface migration is controlled by atomic diffusion of Re, which exhibits the smallest atomic diffusion mobility in the alloy system under consideration. Utilization of the estimated γ/γ′ diffusion mobility enabled a three-dimensional phase-field simulation of microstructure-dependent heterogeneous creep in the γ matrix phase, directional coarsening of the γ′ precipitate (rafting), and macroscopic creep responses. The estimation of γ/γ′ diffusion mobility is assumed to be effective for quantitatively analyzing the rafting kinetics during high-temperature creep by the phase-field simulation.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Computational Mechanics
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