On the Mutual Interaction between Mechanical Stresses and Internal Corrosion during Isothermal and Cyclic Oxidation of Nickel-Base Superalloys
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Published:2008-09
Issue:
Volume:595-598
Page:1023-1031
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ISSN:1662-9752
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Container-title:Materials Science Forum
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language:
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Short-container-title:MSF
Author:
Krupp Ulrich1,
Orosz R.2,
Christ Hans Jürgen3,
Monceau Daniel4
Affiliation:
1. University of Applied Sciences Osnabrück
2. Betriebsforschungsinstitut - VDEh
3. Universität Siegen
4. Ecole Nationale Supérieure de Chimie de Toulouse
Abstract
Thermal cycling has been observed to cause a transition from superficial alumina
formation to internal oxidation and nitridation, an effect that was shown to depend on the specimen
thickness and geometry, which can be described by a spalling-probability model. Once protection
by a dense and adherent alumina scale got lost, the internal-corrosion rate is determined by the
diffusivity and solubility of nitrogen and oxygen in the alloy. These parameters seem to depend not
only on the temperature and the alloy composition but also on the applied mechanical stress.
Internal nitridation under a superimposed creep loading was found to follow a higher rate constant
than under just isothermal exposure. This effect can probably be attributed to dislocation-pipe
diffusion, a mechanism which has been claimed also to be relevant for outward solvent diffusion
during internal corrosion, a phenomenon, which was observed as a stress-relief mechanism during
various internal-reaction processes
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications, Ltd.
Subject
Mechanical Engineering,Mechanics of Materials,Condensed Matter Physics,General Materials Science