Effect of Thermal Exposure on Microstructure Evolution and Mechanical Properties of TC25G Alloy

The microstructure and room temperature tensile properties of heat-treated TC25G alloy after thermal exposure were investigated. The results show that the α phase dispersed in the α phase, and silicide precipitated firstly at the α/β phase boundary and then at the dislocation of the α phase and on t...

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Published inMaterials Vol. 16; no. 12; p. 4462
Main Authors Liu, Zhuomeng, Xin, Shewei, Zhao, Yongqing, Zhu, Peiliang, Dang, Bohao, Zhang, Siyuan, Zhou, Wei
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Switzerland MDPI AG 19.06.2023
MDPI
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Summary:The microstructure and room temperature tensile properties of heat-treated TC25G alloy after thermal exposure were investigated. The results show that the α phase dispersed in the α phase, and silicide precipitated firstly at the α/β phase boundary and then at the dislocation of the α phase and on the β phase. When thermal exposure was 0-10 h at 550 °C and 600 °C, the decrease of alloy strength was mainly due to the dominant effect of dislocations recovery. With the rise and extension of thermal exposure temperature and time, the increasing quantity and size of precipitates played an important role in the improvement of alloy strength. When thermal exposure temperature rose to 650 °C, the strength was always lower than that of heat-treated alloy. However, since the decreasing rate of solid solution strengthening was smaller than the increasing rate of dispersion strengthening, alloy still showed an increasing trend in the range of 5-100 h. When thermal exposure time was 100-500 h, the size of the α phase increased from the critical value of 3 nm to 6 nm, and the interaction between the moving dislocations and the α phase changed from the cutting mechanism to the by-pass mechanism (Orowan mechanism), and thus alloy strength decreased rapidly.
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ISSN:1996-1944
1996-1944
DOI:10.3390/ma16124462