CREEP AND INTERGRANULAR CRACKING OF NI-CR-FE-C IN 360-DEGREES-C ARGON

Authors
Citation
Tm. Angeliu et Gs. Was, CREEP AND INTERGRANULAR CRACKING OF NI-CR-FE-C IN 360-DEGREES-C ARGON, Metallurgical and materials transactions. A, Physical metallurgy andmaterials science, 25(6), 1994, pp. 1169-1183
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Metallurgy & Mining","Material Science
ISSN journal
10735623
Volume
25
Issue
6
Year of publication
1994
Pages
1169 - 1183
Database
ISI
SICI code
1073-5623(1994)25:6<1169:CAICON>2.0.ZU;2-0
Abstract
The influence of carbon and chromium on the creep and intergranular (I G) cracking behavior of controlled-purity Ni-xCr-9Fe-yC alloys in 360- degrees-C argon was investigated using constant extension rate tension (CERT) and constant load tension (CLT) testing. The CERT test results at 360-degrees-C show that the degree of IG cracking increases with d ecreasing bulk chromium or carbon content. The CLT test results at 360 -degrees-C and 430-degrees-C reveal that, as the amounts of chromium a nd carbon in solution decrease, the steady-state creep rate increases. The occurrence of severe IG cracking correlates with a high steady-st ate creep rate, suggesting that creep plays a role in the IG cracking behavior in argon at 360-degrees-C. The failure mode of IG cracking an d the deformation mode of creep are coupled through the formation of g rain boundary voids that interlink to form grain boundary cavities, re sulting in eventual failure by IG cavitation and ductile overload of t he remaining ligaments. Grain boundary sliding may be enhancing grain boundary cavitation by redistributing the stress from inclined to more perpendicular boundaries and concentrating stress at discontinuities for the boundaries oriented 45 deg with respect to the tensile axis. A dditions of carbon or chromium, which reduce the creep rate over all s tress levels, also reduce the amount of IG fracture in CERT experiment s. A damage accumulation model was formulated and applied to CERT test s to determine whether creep damage during a CERT test controls failur e. Results show that, while creep plays a significant role in CERT exp eriments, failure is likely controlled by ductile overload caused by r eduction in area resulting from grain boundary void formation and inte rlinkage.