The excellent mechanical properties of powder metallurgy (P/M) superalloys
strongly depend on the microstructure, such as grain size, and morphology a
nd size distribution of the gamma ' precipitates. The microstructure, is, i
n turn, determined by the heat treatment, viz., solution annealing, quenchi
ng, and subsequent aging. To study the effect of the quenching process, two
types of quenching methods were used to produce different quenched microst
ructures in a UDIMET 720LI (U720LI) alloy. One was a continuous quenching m
ethod, where samples were cooled along linearly controlled cooling profiles
, each at a fixed cooling rate. This test studied the effect of cooling rat
e on the size of cooling gamma ' precipitates (formed during quenching) and
the consequent strengthening effect. The other test was the interrupted qu
enching test, which allowed tracking the growth of cooling gamma ' precipit
ates with decreasing temperature during quenching at a given cooling rate.
The strengthening response at each interrupt temperature was also studied.
Results from the continuous cooling tests showed that the relationship betw
een the size of the cooling gamma ' precipitate and the cooling rate obeys
a power law, with an exponential being about 0.35. The tensile strength was
found to increase linearly with the cooling rate. Strengthening due to the
subsequent aging treatment occurred regardless of cooling rates. The inter
rupted cooling tests showed that gamma ' growth is a linear function of dec
reasing temperature for a given cooling rate. A nonmonotonic degradation of
tensile strength against interrupt temperature was discovered.