Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7969931 | Materials Characterization | 2015 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
A low-alloy 2.25%Cr1%Mo steel (ASTM Grade 22) has been greatly improved by the substitution of almost all of the 1%Mo by 1.6%W. The improved material has been standardized as P/T23 steel (Fe-2.25Cr-1.6W-0.25V-0.05Nb-0.07C). The present investigation was conducted on T23 steel in an effort to obtain a more complete description and understanding of the role of the microstructural evolution and deformation processes in high-temperature creep. Constant load tensile creep tests were carried out in an argon atmosphere in the temperature range 500-650 °C at stresses ranging from 50 to 400 MPa. It was found that the diffusion in the matrix lattice is the creep-rate controlling process. The results of an extensive transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analysis programme to investigate microstructure evolution as a function of temperature are described and compared with the thermodynamic calculations using the software package Thermo-Calc. The significant creep-strength drop of T23 steel after long-term creep exposures can be explained by the decrease in dislocation hardening, precipitation hardening and solid solution hardening due to the instability of the microstructure at high temperature.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
K. Kucharova, V. Sklenicka, M. Kvapilova, M. Svoboda,