Creep and Oxidation Behaviors of 25 wt.% Cr–Containing Nickel-Based Alloys Reinforced by ZrC Carbides
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Design of the Alloys
2.2. Elaboration
2.3. Control of the Obtained Chemical Compositions and Microstructures
2.4. Control of the Hardness of the Alloys
2.5. Creep Tests
2.6. Oxidation Tests
2.7. Characterization of the Oxidized States
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Microstructures and Chemical Compositions of the Alloys
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- The rather moderate presence of C and Zr allowed the nucleation and growth of the matrix first, with as result a dendritic morphology, which is generally favorable for strength and ductility (particularly at high temperature);
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- The presence of carbon in a moderate content allowed the crystallization of carbides, only of a eutectic nature, located in the interdendritic spaces; the carbon content drives the proportions of matrix volume fraction and of interdendritic eutectic volume fraction: when it increases there is less and less dendrites and more and more eutectic carbides;
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- The presence of zirconium, which is a carbide—a former element stronger than chromium, which allows obtaining ZrC carbides, very useful for strengthening the alloys at high temperature due to their high stability and their script—like morphology, is recognized as particularly efficient to resist stress at high temperature;
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- Rating the Zr quantity to obtain the same molar content in Zr as in C allows obtaining ZrC as single carbide phase present; conversely, choosing a Zr molar content lower than the C molar content leads to the additional presence of chromium carbides in the interdendritic spaces.
3.2. Mechanical Properties
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- The addition of carbon, in an environment rich in chromium and containing a strong carbide-forming metal, zirconium, induced by the development of a dense (with 0.25 wt.% C) or very dense (with 0.5 wt.% C) carbide population; whatever the nature—chromium carbide or zirconium carbide—the presence of these particles is much harder than matrix, which hardened the whole alloy; furthermore, due to its particularly strong carbide-former character, zirconium was almost wholly involved in carbides; by comparison with the reference alloy—which contains only chromium carbides—the obtained interdendritic network of ZrC is present with a significantly higher volume fraction and consequently a higher hardness at the whole alloy scale;
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- As eutectic carbides, the chromium carbides (the reference Ni–25Cr–0.5C alloy and Ni–25Cr–0.50C–1.9Zr alloys) and the zirconium carbides (all the three Zr–containing alloys), are all located in the grain boundaries and the interdentritic spaces, where they are combined with the peripherical parts of the dendrites of matrix. In this strategic position they may take part in the resistance against the inter-grain and inter-dendritic decohesion in alloy during the creep deformation due to high temperature stress; in contrast with the reference alloy, the chromium carbides, which rapidly get fragmented, the zirconium carbides—more morphologically stable at high temperature—allowed long lasting cohesion, and the transition from the secondary stage of creep to the tertiary stage was significantly delayed (and not yet observed after 100 h or more (Ni–25Cr–0.50C–3.8Zr alloy).
3.3. Oxidation Kinetics
3.4. Behavior of the Oxide Scales at Cooling
3.5. Study of the Oxidation Products Prior to Cross-Sectional Preparation
3.6. Study of the Oxidation Products after Cross-Sectional Preparation
3.7. Microstructural and Chemical Changes in the Subsurfaces
3.8. The Particular Mechanisms of Oxidation as Suggested by the Metallographic Results
4. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Alloy (3 Zones ×250) | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr |
---|---|---|---|
Cr (average value) | 25.7 | 24.9 | 25.1 |
Cr (standard deviation) | 0.2 | 0.9 | 0.2 |
Zr (average value) | 2.3 | 2.5 | 4.6 |
Zr (standard deviation) | 0.2 | 0.1 | 0.2 |
C (not measured) | (0.25) | (0.50) | (0.50) |
Ni | Balance | Balance | Balance |
Matrix (3 Zones ×250) | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr |
---|---|---|---|
Cr (average value) | 25.8 | 24.4 | 26.2 |
Cr (standard deviation) | 0.4 | 0.1 | 0.7 |
Zr (average value) | 0.3 | 0 | 0.24 |
Zr (standard deviation) | 0.3 | 0 | 0.1 |
C (not measured) | / | / | / |
Ni | Balance | Balance | Balance |
Vickers Hardness (5 Indentations) | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | As-Cast Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr |
---|---|---|---|
average value | 199 | 216 | 251 |
standard deviation | 3 | 7 | 6 |
Creep Rate in the 2nd stage at t = 250 ks | Ni–25Cr– 0.25C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr– 0.50C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr– 0.50C–3.8Zr | Ni–25Cr–0.5C (Reference) |
---|---|---|---|---|
µm/ks | 0.84 | 0.66 | 0.68 | 2nd stage → 3rd stage at t < 60 ks |
µm/h | 3.0 | 2.4 | 2.5 |
Kp (×10−6 mg2 cm−4 s−1) | Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr | Ni–25Cr–0.5C (Reference) |
---|---|---|---|---|
969 | 1460 | 890 | 5.5 |
KpcorrL (×10−6 mg2 cm−4 s−1) | Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr | Ni–25Cr–0.5C (reference) |
30 | 1300 | 1090 | 10.5 | |
KL (×10−7 mg cm−2 s−1) | Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr | Ni–25Cr–0.5C (reference) |
−639 | −154 | 152 | 46.3 |
Oxide Spallation at Cooling | Ni–25Cr –0.25C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–1.9Zr | Ni–25Cr –0.50C–3.8Zr | Ni–25Cr–0.5C (Reference) |
---|---|---|---|---|
Start temperature (°C) | 555 | 507 | 441 | No oxide spallation during cooling |
Mass loss due to spallation (mg cm−2) | −7 | −25 | −1 |
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Berthod, P.; Tlili, S. Creep and Oxidation Behaviors of 25 wt.% Cr–Containing Nickel-Based Alloys Reinforced by ZrC Carbides. Crystals 2022, 12, 416. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst12030416
Berthod P, Tlili S. Creep and Oxidation Behaviors of 25 wt.% Cr–Containing Nickel-Based Alloys Reinforced by ZrC Carbides. Crystals. 2022; 12(3):416. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst12030416
Chicago/Turabian StyleBerthod, Patrice, and Safa Tlili. 2022. "Creep and Oxidation Behaviors of 25 wt.% Cr–Containing Nickel-Based Alloys Reinforced by ZrC Carbides" Crystals 12, no. 3: 416. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst12030416
APA StyleBerthod, P., & Tlili, S. (2022). Creep and Oxidation Behaviors of 25 wt.% Cr–Containing Nickel-Based Alloys Reinforced by ZrC Carbides. Crystals, 12(3), 416. https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst12030416