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Nickel-Based Superalloys for Advanced Turbine Engines: Chemistry, Microstructure and Properties

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TLDR
The chemical, physical, and mechanical characteristics of nickel-based superalloys are reviewed with emphasis on the use of this class of materials within turbine engines as mentioned in this paper, and the role of major and minor alloying additions in multicomponent commercial cast and wrought super-alloys is discussed.
Abstract
The chemical, physical, and mechanical characteristics of nickel-based superalloys are reviewed with emphasis on the use of this class of materials within turbine engines. The role of major and minor alloying additions in multicomponent commercial cast and wrought superalloys is discussed. Microstructural stability and phases observed during processing and in subsequent elevated-temperature service are summarized. Processing paths and recent advances in processing are addressed. Mechanical properties and deformation mechanisms are reviewed, including tensile properties, creep, fatigue, and cyclic crack growth. I. Introduction N ICKEL-BASED superalloys are an unusual class of metallic materials with an exceptional combination of hightemperature strength, toughness, and resistance to degradation in corrosive or oxidizing environments. These materials are widely used in aircraft and power-generation turbines, rocket engines, and other challenging environments, including nuclear power and chemical processing plants. Intensive alloy and process development activities during the past few decades have resulted in alloys that can tolerate average temperatures of 1050 ◦ C with occasional excursions (or local hot spots near airfoil tips) to temperatures as high as 1200 ◦ C, 1 which is approximately 90% of the melting point of the material. The underlying aspects of microstructure and composition that result in these exceptional properties are briefly reviewed here. Major classes of superalloys that are utilized in gas-turbine engines and the corresponding processes for their production are outlined along with characteristic mechanical and physical properties.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Molecular dynamics study of fatigue mechanical properties and microstructural evolution of Ni-based single crystal superalloys under cyclic loading

TL;DR: In this article, the fatigue performance and deformation mechanism of Ni-based single crystal superalloys under cyclic tension-compression loading are studied by molecular dynamics simulations, and the effects of temperature and strain rate on the cyclic deformation of super-alloys are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI

An experimental study of the polycrystalline plasticity of lamellar titanium aluminide

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used digital image correlation and electron backscatter diffraction to map strain and lattice rotation with both sub-colony and sub-lamella spatial resolution in a polycrystalline lamellar γ-TiAl alloy with TiB2 inclusions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Biot Number Analogy for Design of Experiments in Turbine Cooling

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a method that enables experiments to be conducted at near room temperatures, near atmospheric pressures, and using scaled-up geometries to reveal the temperature and heat-flux distributions within turbine materials as if the experiments were conducted under engine operating conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Grain Growth Behavior of Inconel 625 Superalloy

TL;DR: In this article, the grain growth behavior of Inconel 625 superalloy was studied in the temperature range of 900 − 1 250 °C and holding time range of 10 − 80 min.
Journal ArticleDOI

Experimental investigation and modelling of microstructure degradation in a DS Ni-based superalloy using a quantitative cross-correlation analysis method

TL;DR: In this paper, a unified analytical model based on Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner (LSW) theory was proposed to predict the experimentally observed increase in the coarsening extent associated with increase in temperature, time, and applied stress.
References
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Book

Dislocations in solids

TL;DR: In this article, Bertotti, Ferro, and Mazetti proposed a theory of dislocation drag in covalent crystals and formed a model of the formation and evolution of dislocations during irradiation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Creep resistance of CMSX-3 nickel base superalloy single crystals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors studied the effect of dislocation-free nickel base superalloy single crystals with high volume fractions of the γ′ phase on their deformation and found that the dislocation free precipitates are resistant to shearing by dislocations.
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The precipitation of topologically close-packed phases in rhenium-containing superalloys

TL;DR: In this paper, the formation of topologically close-packed (TCP) phases due to the addition of solid solution strengtheners, such as rhenium, molybdenum and tungsten, has been studied.
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Dynamic recrystallization in nickel and nickel-iron alloys during high temperature deformation

TL;DR: In this paper, it is established from metallographic and flow stress observations that dynamic recrystallization occurs at strains greater than a critical value and results in a recrystized grain size which is determined entirely by the flow stress.
Journal ArticleDOI

Creep behaviour of Ni-base single-crystal superalloys with various γ' volume fraction

TL;DR: In this article, a third generation Ni-base single-crystal superalloy TMS-75 and its γ/γ " tie line alloys were designed to contain various volume fractions of γ, while the compositions of two individual phases were kept the same.