Microstructures and Mechanical Properties of NiAl+Mo In-Situ Eutectic Composites

1990 ◽  
Vol 194 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. R. Subramanian ◽  
M. G. Mendiratta ◽  
D. B. Miracle ◽  
D. M. Dimiduk

AbstractThe quasibinary NiAI-Mo system exhibits a large two-phase field between NiAl and the terminal (Mo) solid solution, and offers the potential for producing in-situ eutectic composites for high-temperature structural applications. The phase stability of this composite system was experimentally evaluated, following long-term exposures at elevated temperatures. Bend strengths as a function of temperature and room-temperature fracture toughness data are presented for selected NiA1-Mo alloys, together with results from fractography observations.

1994 ◽  
Vol 364 ◽  
Author(s):  
B. P. Bewlay ◽  
M. R. Jackson ◽  
W. J. Reeder ◽  
H. A. Lipsitt

AbstractIn-situ composites based on binary Nb-Si alloys and consisting of a Nb solid solution with Nb3Si or Nb5Si3 have shown a promising combination of low temperature and high temperature mechanical properties. The environmental resistance and room temperature fracture toughness of these composites can be further enhanced by additions such as Ti, Hf, Cr, and Al. In the present study, ternary Nb-Ti-Si alloys were prepared by directional solidification to generate aligned two and three phase composites containing a Nb solid solution with Nb3Si and/or Nb5Si3. The present paper will describe microstructures, phase equilibria and fracture toughness of these composites. The improvement in the room temperature fracture toughness over binary Nb-Nb5Si3 composites is discussed.


1996 ◽  
Vol 460 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. T. Liu ◽  
P. J. Maziasz ◽  
J. L. Wright

ABSTRACTThe objective of this study is to identify key microstructural parameters which control the mechanical properties of two-phase γ-TiAl alloys with lamellar structures. TiAl alloys with the base composition of Ti-47Al-2Cr-2Nb (at. %) were prepared by arc melting and drop casting, followed by hot extrusion at temperatures above the oc-transus temperature, Tα. The hot extruded materials were then heat treated at various temperatures above and below Tα in order to control microstructural features in these lamellar structures. The mechanical properties of these alloys were determined by tensile testing at temperatures to 1000° C. The tensile elongation at room temperature is strongly dependent on grain size, showing an increase in ductility with decreasing grain size. The strength at room and elevated temperatures is sensitive to interlamellar spacing, showing an increase in strength with decreasing lamellar spacing. Hall-Petch relationships hold well for the yield strength at room and elevated temperatures and for the tensile elongation at room temperature. Tensile elongations of about 5% and yield strengths around 900 MPa are achieved by controlling both colony size and interlamellar spacing. The mechanical properties of the TiAl alloys with controlled lamellar structures produced directly by hot extrusion are much superior to those produced by conventional thermomechanical treatments.


2010 ◽  
Vol 92 ◽  
pp. 41-45
Author(s):  
Jian Guang Xu ◽  
Shi Bo Guo ◽  
Jian Hui Yan ◽  
Da Gong Zhang

Si3N4 particle reinforced MoSi2 composite powder has been successfully synthesized combustion synthesis method. XRD and SEM results showed that the combustion product was mainly composed by MoSi2 and Si3N4. The as-prepared Si3N4/MoSi2 composite powder has been pressureless sintered at 1600°C for 1h. The microstructure and mechanical properties of the composite were investigated. Relative densities of the monolithic material and composite were 92.2% and 89.6%, respectively. The composite has higher Vicker’s hardness and flexural strength than monolithic MoSi2. Especially the room-temperature fracture toughness of the composite is from 4.21MPa•m1/2 for MoSi2 to 7.25MPa•m1/2 for composite, increased by 72.2%, respectively. The morphology of fractured surface of composite revealed the mechanism of improving mechanical properties of MoSi2 matrix. The results of this work showed that in situ Si3N4/MoSi2 composite powder prepared by combustion synthesis could be successfully pressureless sintered and significant improvement of mechanical properties could be achieved.


2006 ◽  
Vol 306-308 ◽  
pp. 941-946
Author(s):  
Sheng Wu Wang ◽  
Tatsuo Tabaru ◽  
Hisatoshi Hirai ◽  
Hideto Ueno

Nb-base in-situ composites with the base composition of Nb-18Si-2HfC were prepared by conventional arc-melting. Their microstructures and mechanical properties, such as high-temperature strength and room temperature fracture toughness, were investigated to elucidate the effects of Re alloying. The in-situ composites predominantly have eutectic microstructures consisting of an Nb solid solution (NbSS) and Nb5Si3. The compressive strength increased with the increasing Re contents at 1470K and not at 1670 K. The strengthening effect observed at 1470 K is higher than that by W and Mo. Re alloying of about 2 % is valuable for improving both the high temperature strength and room temperature fracture toughness of Nb-18Si-2HfC base materials.


Author(s):  
Warren J. MoberlyChan ◽  
J. J. Cao ◽  
L. C. DeJonghe

Nonoxide ceramics are desirable for high temperature structural applications, however, they have typically exhibited inferior room temperature fracture toughness. Similar to processing developments to toughen Si3N4, SiC has recently been processed via control of a phase transformation to produce in situ toughened microstructures. An elongated grain shape, coupled with a tortuous fracture path around grains, can provide bridging behind an advancing crack tip, which increases the crack resistance (rising R curve) and halts crack propagation. Most in situ toughened nonoxide ceramics incorporate upwards of 10-20% secondary phase(s), which simplifies crack propagation through this weaker phase to improve toughness, but typically at the expense of substantially reducing strength at high temperatures. The ABC-SiC in this study can be processed with <3% secondary phases and consequently exhibits record toughness and higher strength than commercial (Hexoloy SA) SiC.


1992 ◽  
Vol 273 ◽  
Author(s):  
P. C. Brennan ◽  
W. H. Kao ◽  
J.-M. Yang

ABSTRACTOrdered Ni3A1 alloys and their composites are attractive materials for elevated-temperature structural applications due to their many favorable properties. The addition of alloying elements can significantly lower the Ni3Al order-disorder transition temperature and also result in the formation of a Ni solid solution. As the percentage of Ni solid solution increases, the composite's room-temperature flexural strength increases. The effect of rocessing parameters on the material's microstructure is discussed. The complex matrix microstructure also has a significant effect on the composite's creep properties. Normal power-law creep was exhibited by the composite material when tested in compression.


Author(s):  
Ernest L. Hall ◽  
J. B. Vander Sande

The present paper describes research on the mechanical properties and related dislocation structure of CdTe, a II-VI semiconductor compound with a wide range of uses in electrical and optical devices. At room temperature CdTe exhibits little plasticity and at the same time relatively low strength and hardness. The mechanical behavior of CdTe was examined at elevated temperatures with the goal of understanding plastic flow in this material and eventually improving the room temperature properties. Several samples of single crystal CdTe of identical size and crystallographic orientation were deformed in compression at 300°C to various levels of total strain. A resolved shear stress vs. compressive glide strain curve (Figure la) was derived from the results of the tests and the knowledge of the sample orientation.


Alloy Digest ◽  
1994 ◽  
Vol 43 (11) ◽  

Abstract CARLSON ALLOYS C600 AND C600 ESR have excellent mechanical properties from sub-zero to elevated temperatures with excellent resistance to oxidation at high temperatures. It is a solid-solution alloy that can be hardened only by cold working. High strength at temperature is combined with good workability. This datasheet provides information on composition, physical properties, elasticity, and tensile properties as well as fracture toughness. It also includes information on corrosion resistance as well as forming, heat treating, and machining. Filing Code: Ni-470. Producer or source: G.O. Carlson Inc.


2021 ◽  
pp. 009524432110203
Author(s):  
Sudhir Bafna

It is often necessary to assess the effect of aging at room temperature over years/decades for hardware containing elastomeric components such as oring seals or shock isolators. In order to determine this effect, accelerated oven aging at elevated temperatures is pursued. When doing so, it is vital that the degradation mechanism still be representative of that prevalent at room temperature. This places an upper limit on the elevated oven temperature, which in turn, increases the dwell time in the oven. As a result, the oven dwell time can run into months, if not years, something that is not realistically feasible due to resource/schedule constraints in industry. Measuring activation energy (Ea) of elastomer aging by test methods such as tensile strength or elongation, compression set, modulus, oxygen consumption, etc. is expensive and time consuming. Use of kinetics of weight loss by ThermoGravimetric Analysis (TGA) using the Ozawa/Flynn/Wall method per ASTM E1641 is an attractive option (especially due to the availability of commercial instrumentation with software to make the required measurements and calculations) and is widely used. There is no fundamental scientific reason why the kinetics of weight loss at elevated temperatures should correlate to the kinetics of loss of mechanical properties over years/decades at room temperature. Ea obtained by high temperature weight loss is almost always significantly higher than that obtained by measurements of mechanical properties or oxygen consumption over extended periods at much lower temperatures. In this paper, data on five different elastomer types (butyl, nitrile, EPDM, polychloroprene and fluorocarbon) are presented to prove that point. Thus, use of Ea determined by weight loss by TGA tends to give unrealistically high values, which in turn, will lead to incorrectly high predictions of storage life at room temperature.


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