Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1584572 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2007 | 8 Pages |
An ultrasonic fatigue testing system capable of operating at temperatures up to 1000 °C has been developed and utilized to study the fatigue behavior of a single crystal superalloy (PWA 1484) at a temperature of 1000 °C and loading frequency of approximately 20 kHz. The stress-life data generated from the ultrasonic testing system were comparable to those from conventional servo-hydraulic fatigue tests for similar single crystal alloys. Interior Ta-rich carbides were the major microstructural feature responsible for crack initiation in the alloy. Crack growth under ultrasonic loading frequency at 1000 °C for PWA 1484 occurred in a crystallographic manner on {1 1 1} octahedral slip planes, in contrast to the normal Mode-I growth mode typically observed for single crystal superalloys at high temperature (>850 °C) with conventional servo-hydraulic loading frequencies (<100 Hz).