Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1567161 Journal of Nuclear Materials 2010 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

The solubility product of Y2O3 in ferrite and the diffusion coefficient of yttrium in ferrite have been obtained by fitting a model based on the classical nucleation–growth–coarsening theory of precipitation, as adapted to an anisothermal heat treatment, to experimental small angle neutron scattering results of Y2O3 precipitate size distributions in a mechanically alloyed and consolidated Fe–15 at.%Cr–0.13 at.%Y–0.18 at.%O ferritic alloy. This precipitation model is coupled to a dispersed barrier model of structural hardening to predict the yield strength of the alloys as a function of heat treatment. The resulting model and thermodynamic/kinetic properties are then applied to better understand how the precipitation kinetics impact the yield stress in various anisothermal heat treatments, as compared to an isothermal heat treatment. The modeling results clearly indicate that the anisothermal heat treatments can be tailored to establish a higher density and a smaller size distribution of Y2O3 precipitates, which also increase the yield stress.

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Physical Sciences and Engineering Energy Nuclear Energy and Engineering
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