Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1660447 | Surface and Coatings Technology | 2009 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
Ultrafine aluminide coatings were successfully produced on Ni-18Fe-17Cr superalloy at 540-600 °C in a modified pack-aluminizing process. Repeated ball-impacts accelerated the formation of the aluminide coatings by a surface refining process, resulting in atomic diffusion occurring at a relatively low temperature. The effects of the operation temperature and the treatment duration on the formation of the coatings have been investigated. The coatings possessed a two-layer structure. The top layer, approximately 5 µm in thickness, exhibited equiaxial coarse grains and was dominated by NiAl3, with small amounts of Fe2Al5 and CrAl5. The bottom layer showed high density, homogeneous, ultrafine grains with diameters approximately 30-50 nm. High-temperature oxidation tests were carried out at 1000 °C. The oxidation kinetics and microstructure of the oxide scale were studied. The experimental results indicated that the coatings greatly enhanced the high-temperature oxidation resistance of Ni-18Fe-17Cr superalloy.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
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Authors
Zhaolin Zhan, Yedong He, Li Li, Hongxi Liu, Yongnian Dai,