Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5454906 | Materials Characterization | 2017 | 30 Pages |
Abstract
The spalling/cracking behaviour, at room temperature, of thermally grown oxide scales under tensile stress was investigated using SEM in-situ tensile testing for two austenitic stainless steels with close composition except their S content. A correlation between damage patterns, microstructure, mechanical and adhesion properties of the oxide scales is proposed. The difference in microstructure evolution during oxidation between the two steels is explained in relation with the volume fraction of MnS inclusions in the substrate (i.e. S content). Although a direct effect of S content on the oxide scale adhesion is not evidenced, the metal/oxide toughness seems strongly affected by oxides features such as scale thickness, Fe content and location of internal oxides (SiO2 along the metal/scale interface or at the grain boundaries of the underneath substrate).
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Céline Pascal, Muriel Braccini, Valérie Parry, Elena Fedorova, Marc Mantel, Djar Oquab, Daniel Monceau,