Internal-carburizing behavior of Ni-V, Ni-Cr, and Ni-3Nb alloys

Citation
At. Allen et Dl. Douglass, Internal-carburizing behavior of Ni-V, Ni-Cr, and Ni-3Nb alloys, OXID METAL, 51(3-4), 1999, pp. 199-219
Citations number
23
Categorie Soggetti
Metallurgy
Journal title
OXIDATION OF METALS
ISSN journal
0030770X → ACNP
Volume
51
Issue
3-4
Year of publication
1999
Pages
199 - 219
Database
ISI
SICI code
0030-770X(199904)51:3-4<199:IBONNA>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
Ni-2V, Ni-5V, Ni-12V, Ni-10Cr, Ni-20Cr, and Ni-3Nb alloys were carburized i n 1.5 v/o C3H6 (bal. H-2) over the range 700-1000 degrees C. Carburization of Ni-SV, Ni-12V, Ni-20Cr, and Ni-3Nb obeyed the parabolic rate law. Ni-2V and Ni-10Cr, however, for med only thin carbide scales upon carburizing. Ca rburization rates decreased with increased vanadium content from Ni-5V to N i-12V for all exposure conditions. V4C3 formed throughout the reaction zone s of Ni-12V. Cr3C2 formed in the surface regions and Cr7C3 formed within th e interior of Ni-20Cr. NbC precipitated in Ni-3Nb under all conditions. The precipitate morphology changed with temperature and distance from the gas- metal surface. V4C3 and Cr3C2 particles were generally small and spheroidal near the surface of Ni-12V and Ni-20Cr, respectively, increasing slightly in size with distance from the surface and with increasing temperature. The vanadium and chromium carbides formed intergranular networks toward the re action fronts. The NbC precipitates were generally large and became Widmans tatten at increasing distance within the carburized zone of Ni-3Nb. Express ions for the diffusion coefficient of carbon in nickel from the measured pe rmeabilities and carbon solubility data were determined. Solubility product s were determined for all of the carbides formed and found to be large in c omparison with the product of the activities of the precipitate elements. W agner's theory of internal oxidation was shown to be an approximation to th e carburization kinetics at temperatures of 900 degrees C or higher.