| Literature DB >> 28894180 |
Chinnapat Panwisawas1, Neil D'Souza2, David M Collins3, Ayan Bhowmik4.
Abstract
Time dependent plastic deformation in a single crystal nickel-base superalloy during cooling from casting relevant temperatures has been studied using a combination of in-situ neutron diffraction, transmission electron microscopy and modelling. Visco-plastic deformation during cooling was found to be dependent on the stress and constraints imposed to component contraction during cooling, which mechanistically comprises creep and stress relaxation. Creep results in progressive work hardening with dislocations shearing the γ' precipitates, a high dislocation density in the γ channels and near the γ/γ' interface and precipitate shearing. When macroscopic contraction is restricted, relaxation dominates. This leads to work softening from a decreased dislocation density and the presence of long segment stacking faults in γ phase. Changes in lattice strains occur to a similar magnitude in both the γ and γ' phases during stress relaxation, while in creep there is no clear monotonic trend in lattice strain in the γ phase, but only a marginal increase in the γ' precipitates. Using a visco-plastic law derived from in-situ experiments, the experimentally measured and calculated stresses during cooling show a good agreement when creep predominates. However, when stress relaxation dominates accounting for the decrease in dislocation density during cooling is essential.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28894180 PMCID: PMC5594012 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-017-10091-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
The nominal composition (in weight %) of CMSX-4 single-crystal superalloy.
| Cr | Co | Mo | Re | W | Al | Ti | Ta | Hf | Ni |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 6.5 | 9 | 0.6 | 3 | 6 | 5.6 | 1 | 6.5 | 0.1 | Balance |
Figure 1Experimentally measured stress during continuous cooling from the initial stresses; (a) 280 MPa, (b) 350 MPa.
Figure 2Lattice strains in γ and γ′ during continuous cooling for initial stresses at (a) 280 MPa and (b) 350 MPa. The variation of lattice misfit with temperature for these different initial stresses is shown in (c).
Figure 3(a,b) Dislocation structure at low magnification in the cooled specimen with 350 MPa applied stress. The specimen was observed in bright field mode showing a high density of interfacial dislocation networks, imaged near the [001]-zone axis. (c) Large sections of the microstructure were, however, free of dislocations. (d) A stacking fault (indicated with white arrow) was also observed in the specimen foil in the γ channel cutting across the γ′ -precipitates. Some dislocations were found to shear the γ′-precipitates (e and f) which in the weak-beam dark field mode were observed to be closely spaced partial dislocations, shown in the insets of (e) and (f).
Figure 4(a–d) Dislocation structure observed in the cooled specimen with 280 MPa applied stress with a very high density of dislocations in the γ channels, a high density network of dislocations near the γ/γ′ interface and also inside the γ′ precipitates. Precipitate shearing by dislocations was observed (e and f) – the shearing dislocations are either pairs of partials (shown by white arrow in (d)) or dipoles (shown by arrows in (e) and (f)).
Figure 5Dislocation Burgers vector analysis with dislocations A–G imaged under various two-beam conditions in the cooled specimen with 350 MPa applied stress. The scale bars on each image measure 0.2 µm.
Figure 6Time dependent strain rates during isothermal loading; (a) relaxation strain rate and (b) creep strain rate at 950 °C and 1000 °C; and creep strain over 9 min holding at isothermal testing at (c) 950 °C and (d) 1000 °C.
Fitting parameters of the visco-plasticity model for .
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| 950 °C |
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| 773 | 11 |
| 1000 °C |
| 12 |
| 773 | 12 |
Figure 7Stress relaxation corresponding to (a) cyclically loaded sample with respect to (b) single loading experiment.
Comparison of the role of prior induced deformation on stress relaxation during the isothermal relaxation test at 1000 °C.
| Applied stress (MPa) | | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| 0–3 mins | 3–6 mins | 6–9 mins | |
| 310 | 56 | 106 | 121 |
| 340 | 59 | 101 | 120 |
Figure 8(a) The distribution of the predicted stress from 3D Abaqus model captured at 950 °C. Evolution of stress from calculations and juxtaposed experimentally measured stress at (b) 280 MPa and (c) 350 MPa applied stresses. These are compared with evolution of stress from a 1D model calculation alongside experimentally measured stresses for initial stresses; (d) 280 MPa, (e) 350 MPa.
Proposed testing procedure to derive a constitutive law for the cooling experiment taking into account prior induced deformation.
| Test step | Initial cooling condition | Intermediate relaxation temperature | Initial stress before relaxation | Decrease in stress from relaxation |
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| … | … | … | … | … |
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