Precipitation Strengthening in Ni–Cu Alloys Fabricated Using Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Technology
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Experimental Techniques
3. Results
3.1. Microstructure Characterisation
3.2. Tensile Properties
3.3. Hardness, Toughness and Wear Resistance
3.4. Mechanical Properties of Hot Rolled Monel K500 Plate
4. Discussion
4.1. Effect of Alloy Composition and Processing on Grain Structure and Particle Parameters
4.2. Effect Of Alloy Composition and Processing on Mechanical and Wear Properties
5. Conclusions
- In the as-weld condition, precipitation of TiC and TiCN particles was observed in Monel K500, the alloy with a higher C content, rather than in FM60, containing a higher Ti content. In FM60, the precipitation of Ti-rich oxides and MnS-core particles took place, which coincided with a higher Mn content in FM60.
- Annealing at 1100 °C followed by ageing at 610 °C resulted in an extensive precipitation of TiC particles in Monel K500 (a 240–290 times increase in the TiC number density compared to the as-weld condition). However, in FM60, the particle precipitation was relatively sluggish (up to a 70% increase in the number density). The second ageing at 410 °C has led to the particle coarsening, accompanied by a decrease in the particle number density, in both alloys.
- Due to the precipitation of TiC/TiCN particles and the smaller secondary dendrite arm spacing, Monel K500 exhibited higher hardness, yield stress and tensile strength than FM60 for all the studied conditions. In spite of the FM60 elongation being larger in annealed and aged conditions, the toughness of Monel K500 was higher due to higher strength. In accordance with higher hardness and toughness, the wear resistance of Monel K500 was higher in almost all conditions.
- In the as-weld condition, the lowest hardness, strength and wear resistance in both alloys were observed for the slowest deposition speed of 300 mm/min. These coincided with the highest particle number density in both alloys. In the annealed and aged conditions, the highest wear resistance (supported by either the highest hardness or strength) in both alloys was obtained at the highest deposition speed of 500 mm/min. These coincided with the low particle number density. In spite of a 240–290 times increase in the particle number density in Monel K500, after annealing and ageing at 610 °C, the wear resistance increased by only 16%, and only a 70% increase in the particle number density in FM60 resulted in a 24% increase in the wear resistance. Obviously, fine (<20 nm) particles, not visible in SEM and not studied here, played their role in properties development. This requires further investigation.
Author Contributions
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Alloy | Ni | Mn | Fe | Si | Al | Ti | C | S | P | Cu |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Monel K500 | 68.3 | 0.8 | 1.29 | 0.17 | 3.0 | 0.5 | 0.088 | 0.003 | 0.003 | bal. |
FM60 | 67.2 | 3.2 | 0.08 | 0.07 | 0.2 | 1.5 | 0.004 | 0.014 | 0.003 | bal. |
Heat Treatment Condition | Particles (SEM Size Range) | Mechanical Properties | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ND * × 10−3 µm−2 | Size, nm | Chemistry, % | HV | YS, MPa | UTS, MPa | El, % | MPa·% | Wear Mass Loss, g | Wear Track | |||
Width, mm | Max. Depth, μm | |||||||||||
As-weld | 300 | 3.6 | 437 ± 150 | 72 Ti-rich 28 Mn-rich | 144 | 170 ± 5 | 430 ± 15 | 47 ± 2 | 14,100 | 0.0896 | 2.101 | 106 |
400 | 3.1 | 448 ± 140 | 69 Ti-rich 31 Mn-rich | 141 | 165 ± 10 | 410 ± 10 | 51 ± 3 | 14,662 | 0.0662 | 2.124 | 100 | |
500 | 2.6 | 331 ± 160 | 64 Ti-rich 36 Mn-rich | 148 | 160 ± 5 | 408 ± 15 | 50 ± 1 | 14,200 | 0.0685 | 2.160 | 75 | |
Age at 610 | 300 | 865 | 90 ± 50 | 100 Ti-rich | 256 | 250 ± 4 | 522 ± 25 | 39 ± 1 | 15,054 | 0.0758 | 1.923 | 106 |
400 | 898 | 75 ± 45 | 100 Ti-rich | 255 | 300 ± 3 | 615 ± 20 | 37 ± 1 | 16,928 | 0.0601 | 2.057 | 90 | |
500 | 692 | 85 ± 47 | 100 Ti-rich | 262 | 290 ± 4 | 609 ± 15 | 32 ± 1 | 14,384 | 0.0556 | 2.190 | 47 | |
Age at 610 + 480 | 300 | 448 | 160 ± 74 | 100 Ti-rich | 259 | 320 ± 3 | 536 ± 5 | 12 ± 1 | 5,136 | 0.0748 | 2.020 | 82 |
400 | 667 | 90 ± 50 | 100 Ti-rich | 236 | 250 ± 5 | 563 ± 5 | 34 ± 4 | 13,821 | 0.0625 | 2.105 | 48 | |
500 | 641 | 95 ± 45 | 100 Ti-rich | 265 | 280 ± 3 | 622 ± 20 | 31 ± 1 | 13,981 | 0.0589 | 2.270 | 43 |
Heat Treatment Condition | Particles (SEM Size Range) | Mechanical Properties | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
ND × 10−3 µm−2 | Size, nm | Chemistry, % | HV | YS, MPa | UTS, MPa | El, % | MPa·% | Wear Mass Loss, g | Wear track | |||
Width, mm | Max. Depth, µm | |||||||||||
As-weld | 300 | 11.4 | 311 ± 170 | 67Mn-rich 33TiAl-rich | 131 | 146 ± 3 | 356 ± 10 | 48 ± 3 | 12,048 | 0.0902 | 2.234 | 132 |
400 | 7.2 | 392 ± 150 | 66Mn-rich 34TiAl-rich | 132 | 149 ± 5 | 361 ± 20 | 47 ± 1 | 11,985 | 0.0722 | 2.240 | 124 | |
500 | 4.7 | 388 ± 160 | 80Mn-rich 20TiAl-rich | 134 | 160 ± 4 | 375 ± 5 | 48 ± 2 | 12,840 | 0.0744 | 2.379 | 95 | |
Age at 610 | 300 | 12.7 | 278 ± 90 | 52Mn-rich 48TiAl-rich | 163 | 160 ± 3 | 397 ± 5 | 41 ± 1 | 10,804 | 0.0689 | 1.730 | 107 |
400 | 8.5 | 274 ± 110 | 50Mn-rich 50TiAl-rich | 164 | 155 ± 5 | 410 ± 10 | 43 ± 1 | 11,718 | 0.0639 | 2.085 | 85 | |
500 | 8.1 | 236 ± 95 | 55Mn-rich 45TiAl-rich | 162 | 205 ± 3 | 428 ± 20 | 36 ± 3 | 11,034 | 0.0587 | 2.105 | 65 | |
Age at 610 + 480 | 300 | 9.2 | 285 ± 100 | 61Mn-rich 39TiAl-rich | 139 | 115 ± 4 | 358 ± 10 | 48 ± 2 | 11,160 | 0.0734 | 2.200 | 94 |
400 | 8.9 | 288 ± 97 | 70Mn-rich 30TiAl-rich | 192 | 170 ± 3 | 490 ± 20 | 39 ± 1 | 12,870 | 0.0680 | 2.208 | 86 | |
500 | 7.7 | 261 ± 95 | 62Mn-rich 38TiAl-rich | 173 | 190 ± 5 | 428 ± 20 | 40 ± 2 | 11,760 | 0.0602 | 2.220 | 79 |
Heat Treatment Condition | HV | YS, MPa | UTS, MPa | El, % | MPa·% | Mass Loss, g |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Anneal | 155 | 368 | 724 ± 20 | 25 ± 1 | 13,650 | 0.1821 |
Age at 610 | 250 | 515 | 833 ± 5 | 15 ± 1 | 10,110 | 0.1392 |
Age at 610 + 480 | 270 | 518 | 815 ± 10 | 12 ± 1 | 7998 | 0.1380 |
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Marenych, O.; Kostryzhev, A.; Shen, C.; Pan, Z.; Li, H.; van Duin, S. Precipitation Strengthening in Ni–Cu Alloys Fabricated Using Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Technology. Metals 2019, 9, 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/met9010105
Marenych O, Kostryzhev A, Shen C, Pan Z, Li H, van Duin S. Precipitation Strengthening in Ni–Cu Alloys Fabricated Using Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Technology. Metals. 2019; 9(1):105. https://doi.org/10.3390/met9010105
Chicago/Turabian StyleMarenych, Olexandra, Andrii Kostryzhev, Chen Shen, Zengxi Pan, Huijun Li, and Stephen van Duin. 2019. "Precipitation Strengthening in Ni–Cu Alloys Fabricated Using Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Technology" Metals 9, no. 1: 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/met9010105
APA StyleMarenych, O., Kostryzhev, A., Shen, C., Pan, Z., Li, H., & van Duin, S. (2019). Precipitation Strengthening in Ni–Cu Alloys Fabricated Using Wire Arc Additive Manufacturing Technology. Metals, 9(1), 105. https://doi.org/10.3390/met9010105