Chromium-based bcc-superalloys strengthened by iron supplements

Kan Ma, Thomas Blackburn, Johan P. Magnussen, Michael Kerbstadt, Pedro A. Ferreirós, Tatu Pinomaa, Christina Hofer, David G. Hopkinson, Sarah J. Day, Paul A.J. Bagot, Michael P. Moody, Mathias C. Galetz, Alexander J. Knowles*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

12 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Chromium alloys are being considered for next-generation concentrated solar power applications operating > 800 °C. Cr offers advantages in melting point, cost, and oxidation resistance. However, improvements in mechanical performance are needed. Here, Cr-based body-centred-cubic (bcc) alloys of the type Cr(Fe)-NiAl are investigated, leading to ‘bcc-superalloys’ comprising a bcc-Cr(Fe) matrix (β) strengthened by ordered-bcc NiAl intermetallic precipitates (β’), with iron additions to tailor the precipitate volume fraction and mechanical properties at high temperatures. Computational design using CALculation of PHAse Diagram (CALPHAD) predicts that Fe increases the solubility of Ni and Al, increasing precipitate volume fraction, which is validated experimentally. Nano-scale, highly-coherent B2-NiAl precipitates with lattice misfit ∼ 0.1% are formed in the Cr(Fe) matrix. The Cr(Fe)-NiAl A2-B2 alloys show remarkably low coarsening rate (∼102 nm3/h at 1000 °C), outperforming ferritic-superalloys, cobalt- and nickel-based superalloys. Low interfacial energies of ∼ 40/20 mJ/m2 at 1000/1200 °C are determined based on the coarsening kinetics. The low coarsening rates are principally attributed to the low solubility of Ni and Al in the Cr matrix. The alloys show high compressive yield strength of ∼320 MPa at 1000 °C. The Fe-modified alloy exhibits resistance to age softening, related to the low coarsening rate as well as the relatively stable Orowan strengthening as a function of precipitate radius. Microstructure tailoring with Fe additions offers a new design route to improve the balance of properties in “Cr-superalloys”, accelerating their development as a new class of high-temperature materials.
Original languageEnglish
Article number119183
JournalActa Materialia
Volume257
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 3 Aug 2023
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Funding

This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme under grant agreement No 958418 “COMPASsCO2” (https://www.compassco2.eu). A Knowles acknowledges support from: UKRI Future Leaders Fellowship (MR/T019174/1) and Royal Academy of Engineering Research Fellowship (RF\201819\18\158). The atom probe facility at the University of Oxford is funded by EPSRC grant EP/T011505/1 and access was supported by UKRI-NNUF (Call 5 Application 58). The authors also acknowledge the Diamond Light Source (United Kingdom) for time on beamline I11 under proposal CY32708 and on instrument E02 in the electron Physical Science Imaging Centre (ePSIC) under proposal MG32309 supported by Dr Christopher Allen. The authors thank the Centre for Electron Microscopy (University of Birmingham) for their support & assistance in this work.

Keywords

  • Bcc-superalloy
  • Chromium
  • Coarsening kinetics
  • Electron microscopy
  • Strengthening

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