scholarly journals Crystallographic Orientation Relationship with Geometrically Necessary Dislocation Accumulation During High-Temperature Deformation in RR1000 Nickel-Based Superalloy

2018 ◽  
Vol 50 (2) ◽  
pp. 534-539 ◽  
Author(s):  
Soran Birosca
Author(s):  
MK Samal

Development of reliable computational models to predict the high temperature deformation behavior of nickel-based superalloys is in the forefront of materials research. These alloys find wide applications in manufacturing of turbine blades and discs of aircraft engines. The microstructure of these alloys consists of the primary γ′-phase, and the secondary and tertiary precipitates (of Ni3Al type) are dispersed as γ′-phases in the gamma matrix. It is computationally expensive to incorporate the explicit finite element model of the γ-γ′ microstructure in a crystal plasticity-based constitutive framework to simulate the response of the polycrystalline microstructure. Existing models in literature do not account for these underlying micro-structural features which are important for simulation of polycrystalline response. The aim of this work is to develop a physically motivated multi-scale approach for simulation of high temperature response of nickel-based superalloys. At the lower length scale, a dislocation density-based crystal plasticity model is developed which simulates the response of various types of microstructures. The microstructures are designed with various shapes and volume fractions of γ′-precipitates. A new model for simulation of the mechanism of anti-phase boundary shearing of the γ′-precipitates, by the matrix dislocations, is developed in this work. The lower scale model is homogenized as a function of various micro-structural parameters, and the homogenized model is used in the next scale of multi-scale simulation. In addition, a new criterion for initiation of micro-twin and a constitutive model for twin strain accumulation are developed. This new micro-twin model along with the homogenized crystal plasticity model has been used to simulate the creep response of a single crystal nickel-based superalloy, and the results have been compared with those of experiment from literature. It was observed that the new model has been able to model the tension–compression asymmetry as observed in single crystal experiments.


2005 ◽  
Vol 475-479 ◽  
pp. 837-840
Author(s):  
Seiji Miura ◽  
Hiroyuki Shimamura ◽  
Kenji Ohkubo ◽  
Tetsuo Mohri

Investigation on the crystallographic orientation relationships among D022-Al3Ti, A15-Mo3Al and high temperature bcc phase consisting of an Al-Mo-Ti ternary alloy with an equi-axed two-phase structure was conducted by FESEM/EBSD analysis. The grains of intermetallic phases have certain crystallographic orientations each other, while the crystallographic orientation distributions become random after a high temperature deformation. This strongly suggests the grain boundary sliding and grain rotating govern the high temperature deformation, which is consistent with the fact that the strain-rate sensitivity m is 0.3 or higher during a steady-state compressive deformation.


2008 ◽  
Vol 57 (6) ◽  
pp. 543-547
Author(s):  
Takuma WADA ◽  
Takahiro KAKEI ◽  
Hiroyuki HORII ◽  
Takeshi SHIONO ◽  
Yasunori OKAMOTO

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