Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7973496 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2018 | 41 Pages |
Abstract
A newly developed Ni-Fe-based weld metal has been researched for the microstructural and mechanical evolutions during prolonged thermal exposure using scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The M23C6-carbides precipitated at grain boundaries and around the primary (Nb, Ti)C phases in the Ni-Fe-based weld metal during prolonged exposure at 650 °C and 700 °C. The Cr, Mo-rich sigma(Ï) and Cr-rich α-Cr formed as platelets and mainly located in the interdendritic areas during the exposure. Ï phase had the orientation relationships of [001]γ//[112Ì
]Ï,(2Ì
20)γ//(1Ì
10)Ï and (2Ì
2Ì
0)γ//(111)Ï with the γ matrix. Higher (Al + Ti) content accelerated the precipitation of these Cr-rich phases and resulted in a significant deterioration of tensile ductility after 5000 h at 700 °C. Precipitating and coarsening of spherical γⲠdominated the tensile strength evolution and the optimized γⲠradius with the best tensile strength was estimated to be 21-25 nm. (Al + Ti) content had no obvious effect on the γⲠcoarsening rate but it affected the γⲠparticle density Ns in two sides: On the one hand, higher (Al + Ti) content increased the Ns, which increased the 0.2% yield strength (Rp0.2)and tensile strength ( Rm). On the other hand, higher (Al + Ti) content increased the amount of Ï phases which induced the γⲠenvelopes to form and resulted in the decrease of Ns, and it would decreased the Rp0.2 and Rm.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Dong Wu, Dianzhong Li, Shanping Lu,