Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
7983629 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2013 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
The present work is an attempt to possibly obtain the most suitable reheat treatment, which could provide the optimal microstructural characteristics for creep-exposed superalloys. After creep at 850 °C/350 MPa for 96 h and 140 h a cast nickel-based superalloy was reheat-treated with different programs, and then the specimens were subjected to creep again at the same condition. Creep tests indicate that during reheat treatment applying aging at lower temperature, 850 °C, for proper time (4 h) before aging at 1050 °C rather than a repeated standard heat treatment is beneficial to restore creep life. Creep-induced changes in the microstructure, such as excessive grain-boundary secondary M23C6 and/or M6C carbides formation, and primary MC carbides decomposition, are noticeably more advanced in the reheat-treated alloys. A quantitative study on the dissolution of Ï phases and the formation of cavitations is presented. After the interrupted creep, the γⲠparticles at dendrite cores remained cubic-shaped. However, the rafting of cuboidal γⲠprecipitates was observed in the same creep condition by the reheat treatment programs. Design of a reheat treatment for recovering the creep properties should emphasize the promotion of ductility rather than strength of the alloy. An equation based on the continuum damage-mechanics theory, was suggested to evaluate the remaining creep life.
Related Topics
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Authors
J.S. Hou, L.Z. Zhou, C. Yuan, Z. Tang, J.T. Guo, X.Z. Qin, P.K. Liaw,