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Spinodal Decomposition Versus Classical Gamma-Prime Nucleation in a Nickel-Base Superalloy Powder: An In-Situ Neutron Diffraction and Atomic-Scale Analysis

38 Pages Posted: 1 May 2020 Publication Status: Accepted

See all articles by David M. Collins

David M. Collins

University of Birmingham - School of Metallurgy and Materials

Neil D’Souza

Rolls-Royce plc.

Chinnapat Panwisawas

Queen Mary University of London; University of Leicester - NISCO UK Research Centre

Chrysanthi Papadaki

University of Leicester - NISCO UK Research Centre

Geoff D. West

University of Warwick - Warwick Manufacturing Group

Paraskevas Kontis

Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung

Abstract

Contemporary powder-based polycrystalline nickel-base superalloys inherit microstructures and properties that are heavily determined by the thermo-mechanical treatments during processing. Here, the influence of a thermal exposure alone to an alloy powder is studied to elucidate the controlling formation mechanisms of the strengthening precipitates using a combination of atom probe tomography and in-situ neutron diffraction. The initial powder comprised a single-phase supersaturated γ only; from this, the evolution of γ-prime volume fraction and lattice misfit was assessed. The initial powder notably possessed elemental segregation of Cr and Co and elemental repulsion between Ni, Al and Ti with Cr; here proposed to be a precursor for subsequent γ to γ-prime phase transformations. Subsolvus heat treatments yielded a unimodal γ-prime distribution, formed during heating, with evidence supporting its formation to be via spinodal decomposition. A supersolvus heat treatment led to the formation of this same γ-prime population during heating, but dissolves as the temperature increases further. The γ-prime then reprecipitates as a multimodal population during cooling, here forming by classical nucleation and growth. Atom probe characterisation provided intriguing precipitate characteristics, including clear differences in chemistry and microstructure, depending on whether the γ-prime formed during heating or cooling.

Keywords: Superalloys, Neutron diffraction, Phase Transformation, Powder Metallurgy, Precipitation

Suggested Citation

Collins, David M. and D’Souza, Neil and Panwisawas, Chinnapat and Papadaki, Chrysanthi and West, Geoff D. and Kontis, Paraskevas, Spinodal Decomposition Versus Classical Gamma-Prime Nucleation in a Nickel-Base Superalloy Powder: An In-Situ Neutron Diffraction and Atomic-Scale Analysis. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3581371 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3581371

David M. Collins

University of Birmingham - School of Metallurgy and Materials ( email )

Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT
United Kingdom

Neil D’Souza

Rolls-Royce plc.

Derby, DE24 8BJ
United Kingdom

Chinnapat Panwisawas

Queen Mary University of London ( email )

University of Leicester - NISCO UK Research Centre ( email )

Leicester, LE1 7RH
United Kingdom

Chrysanthi Papadaki

University of Leicester - NISCO UK Research Centre

Leicester, LE1 7RH
United Kingdom

Geoff D. West (Contact Author)

University of Warwick - Warwick Manufacturing Group

Coventry, CV4 7AL
United Kingdom

Paraskevas Kontis

Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung ( email )

Max-Planck-Straße 1
Max Planck Strasse 1
40237 Düsseldorf, DE Nordrhein-Westfalen 40237
Germany

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