scholarly journals High temperature mechanical integrity of selective laser melted alloy 718 evaluated by slow strain rate tests

2021 ◽  
Vol 140 ◽  
pp. 102974
Author(s):  
Dunyong Deng ◽  
Ru Lin Peng ◽  
Johan Moverare
2013 ◽  
Vol 592-593 ◽  
pp. 590-593 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mattias Calmunger ◽  
Guo Cai Chai ◽  
Sten Johansson ◽  
Johan Moverare

Biomass power plants with high efficiency are desired as a renewable energy resource. High efficiency can be obtained by increasing temperature and pressure. An upgrade of the material performance to high temperature material is therefore required in order to meet the increased demands due to the higher temperature and the more corrosive environment. In this study, the materials high-temperature behaviours of AISI 304 and Alloy617 under slow deformation rate are evaluated using high-temperature long-term aged specimens subjected to slow strain rate tensile testing (SSRT) with strain rates down to 10-6/s at 700°C. Both materials show decreasing stress levels and elongation to fracture when tensile deformed using low strain rate and elevated temperature. At high-temperature and low strain rates cracking in grain boundaries due to larger precipitates formed during deformation is the most common fracture mechanism.


Author(s):  
Kannan Subramanian ◽  
Harish P. Cherukuri

Superalloys are metallic alloys used for high temperature applications such as encountered in the aircraft industry and where resistance to deformation is a primary requirement. Alloy 718 is one such Nickel-base superalloy that resists deformation at elevated temperatures and is therefore difficult to hot work. One of the major hotworking operations is multi-pass shape rolling in which Alloy 718 undergoes multiple deformations in several passes along with reheating between passes. For a given composition of alloy, the high temperature flow stress is influenced to a large extent by the grain size of the microstructure. In the case of shape rolling in which the cross section changes from circular to oval in alternate passes, the correct working forces, which relate to gauge and shape control as well as to power requirements, can be estimated accurately only if the microstructure relevant to the specific pass of rolling is known. In addition, the microstructure present at the end of the rolling and cooling operations controls the product properties. Control of grain size is an increasingly important characteristic in hotworking. The narrow temperature range (980°C and 1120°C [1]) for hotworking of Alloy 718 makes the grain size control more difficult. During hotworking, Alloy 718 undergoes microscopic and mesoscopic events such as dynamic recrystallization (DRX), metadynamic recrystallization (MDRX) and static grain growth (SGG) depending on the temperature, strain rate and retained strain. Modeling these microstructural events is important in designing the rolling process. Due to the tremendous amount of time, cost and effort associated with experiments and industrial trials, numerical methods are resorted to because of the complexity of the variables involved in multi-pass rolling. One such popular numerical technique, finite element (FE) method can predict process variables such as strain, strain rate and temperature for the deformation process. In general, microstructural modeling relates these process variables to microstructural evolution. During microstructural modeling, constitutive equations describing the microstructural evolutions are developed using experiments, which can then be readily implemented in an FE package capable of modeling rolling processes.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document