10 results on '"MX nanoprecipitates"'
Search Results
2. Importance of austenitization temperature and ausforming on creep strength in 9Cr ferritic/martensitic steel.
- Author
-
Vivas, J., Capdevila, C., Altstadt, E., Houska, M., and San-Martín, D.
- Subjects
- *
FERRITIC steel , *THERMAL stability , *METALS , *DUCTILITY , *THERMOMECHANICAL properties of metals , *MICROSTRUCTURE - Abstract
Small Punch Creep technique was used as a screening procedure to evaluate the creep properties of different microstructures developed in a thermomechanical simulator. The goal seek was to generate alternative microstructures in a conventional ferritic-martensitic G91 steel grade which boost thermal stability at temperatures as high as 700 °C. The developed microstructures allow studying the effect of the austenitization temperature optimized by thermodynamic calculations and the ausforming on the creep strength and ductility. The improvement in creep strength recorded was attributable to a higher number density of MX precipitates. By contrast, these microstructures showed an important reduction in creep ductility. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Effect of Ausforming Temperature on the Microstructure of G91 Steel.
- Author
-
Vivas, Javier, Capdevila, Carlos, Jimenez, José Antonio, Benito-Alfonso, Miguel, and San-Martin, David
- Subjects
AUSFORMED steel ,TEMPERATURE ,MICROSTRUCTURE ,STEEL ,THERMOMECHANICAL treatment - Abstract
The development of thermomechanical treatments (TMT) has a high potential for improving creep-strength in 9Cr-1Mo ferritic/martensitic steel (ASTM T/P91) to operate at temperatures beyond 600 °C. To maximize the number of nanoscale MX precipitates, an ausforming procedure has been used to increase the number of nucleation sites for precipitation inside the martensite lath. Relative to standard heat treatments (consisting of austenitization at about 1040 °C followed by tempering at about 730 °C) this processing concept has enabled achieving a microstructure containing approximately three orders of magnitude higher number density of MX precipitates having a size around four times smaller in ASTM T/P91 steel. On the other hand; this TMT has little effect on the size and number density of M
23 C6 particles. The optimized microstructure produced by this TMT route proposed is expected to improve the creep strength of this steel. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Direct observation of creep strengthening nanoprecipitate formation in ausformed ferritic/martensitic steels
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (US), Vivas, Javier, De-Castro, David, Poplawsky, Jonathan D., San-Martín, David, Capdevila, Carlos, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (US), Vivas, Javier, De-Castro, David, Poplawsky, Jonathan D., San-Martín, David, and Capdevila, Carlos
- Abstract
It is well known the effectiveness of ausforming on increasing the dislocation density of fresh martensite. This work demonstrates, using atom probe tomography, that this increase in the dislocation density has a strong influence on the nucleation of nanoprecipitates during tempering. Therefore, ausforming might be a powerful processing route for the two-fold improvement of ferritic/martensitic steels where creep resistance is of paramount importance. Firstly, ausforming refines the martensitic microstructure (high strength and toughness), and secondly, it increases the number density of thermally stable nanoprecipitates (creep resistance).
- Published
- 2019
5. Direct observation of creep strengthening nanoprecipitate formation in ausformed ferritic/martensitic steels
- Author
-
Carlos Capdevila, Jonathan D. Poplawsky, Javier Vivas, D. De-Castro, David San-Martin, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), and Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (US)
- Subjects
Toughness ,Materials science ,Ausforming ,Nucleation ,02 engineering and technology ,Atom probe ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,law ,Creep strength ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Tempering ,010302 applied physics ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Metals and Alloys ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Atom probe tomography ,Creep resistant steels ,Creep ,MX nanoprecipitates ,Mechanics of Materials ,Martensite ,Dislocation ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
It is well known the effectiveness of ausforming on increasing the dislocation density of fresh martensite. This work demonstrates, using atom probe tomography, that this increase in the dislocation density has a strong influence on the nucleation of nanoprecipitates during tempering. Therefore, ausforming might be a powerful processing route for the two-fold improvement of ferritic/martensitic steels where creep resistance is of paramount importance. Firstly, ausforming refines the martensitic microstructure (high strength and toughness), and secondly, it increases the number density of thermally stable nanoprecipitates (creep resistance)., Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (MINECO) in the form of a Coordinate Project (MAT2016-80875-C3-1-R). APT has been conducted at ORNL's Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences (CNMS), which is a U.S. DOE Office of Science User Facility. The authors are grateful to Mr. Miguel Angel Acedo for the dilatometer tests undertaken at the Phase Transformation laboratory of CENIM. J. Vivas acknowledges financial support in the form of a FPI Grant BES-2014-069863. This work contributes to the Joint Programme on Nuclear Materials (JPNM) of the European Energy Research Alliance (EERA).
- Published
- 2019
6. Effect of Ausforming on Creep Strength of G91 Heat-Resistant Steel
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Comunidad de Madrid, Vivas, J., Rementería, Rosalía, Serrano, M., Altstadt, E., San-Martín, David, Capdevila, Carlos, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Comunidad de Madrid, Vivas, J., Rementería, Rosalía, Serrano, M., Altstadt, E., San-Martín, David, and Capdevila, Carlos
- Abstract
The major challenge in a heat-resistant steel is to generate thermally stable microstructures that allow increasing the operating temperature, which will improve the thermal efficiency of the power plant without diminishing strength or time to rupture. The strengthening mechanism in tempered martensitic 9Cr steels comes mainly from the combination of solid solution effect and of precipitation hardening by fine MX carbo-nitrides, which enhance the sub-boundary hardening. This work is focused on the effect of ausforming processing on MX nanoprecipitation, on both their distribution and number density, during the subsequent tempering heat treatment. The creep strength at 700 oC was evaluated by small punch creep tests. The creep results after ausforming were compared to those obtained after conventional heat treatment concluding, in general, that ausforming boosts the creep strength of the steel at 700 oC. Therefore, conventional ausforming thermomechanical treatment is a promising processing route to raise the operating temperature of 9Cr heat-resistant steels.
- Published
- 2018
7. Importance of austenitization temperature and ausforming on creep strength in 9Cr ferritic/martensitic steel
- Author
-
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Vivas, Javier, Capdevila, Carlos, Altstadt, E., Houska, M., San-Martín, David, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España), Vivas, Javier, Capdevila, Carlos, Altstadt, E., Houska, M., and San-Martín, David
- Abstract
Small Punch Creep technique was used as a screening procedure to evaluate the creep properties of different microstructures developed in a thermomechanical simulator. The goal seek was to generate alternative microstructures in a conventional ferritic-martensitic G91 steel grade which boost thermal stability at temperatures as high as 700 °C. The developed microstructures allow studying the effect of the austenitization temperature optimized by thermodynamic calculations and the ausforming on the creep strength and ductility. The improvement in creep strength recorded was attributable to a higher number density of MX precipitates. By contrast, these microstructures showed an important reduction in creep ductility.
- Published
- 2018
8. Effect of Ausforming on Creep Strength of G91 Heat-Resistant Steel
- Author
-
Vivas, J., Rementería, Rosalía, Serrano, M., Altstadt, E., San-Martín, D., Capdevila, Carlos, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), and Comunidad de Madrid
- Subjects
Carbonitrides precipitation ,Tempering ,Creep resistant steels ,MX nanoprecipitates ,Martensite ,Ferritic/martensitic steel ,Thermomechanical treatment - Abstract
Título Libro: Processing and Manufacturing of Advanced Materials, The major challenge in a heat-resistant steel is to generate thermally stable microstructures that allow increasing the operating temperature, which will improve the thermal efficiency of the power plant without diminishing strength or time to rupture. The strengthening mechanism in tempered martensitic 9Cr steels comes mainly from the combination of solid solution effect and of precipitation hardening by fine MX carbo-nitrides, which enhance the sub-boundary hardening. This work is focused on the effect of ausforming processing on MX nanoprecipitation, on both their distribution and number density, during the subsequent tempering heat treatment. The creep strength at 700 oC was evaluated by small punch creep tests. The creep results after ausforming were compared to those obtained after conventional heat treatment concluding, in general, that ausforming boosts the creep strength of the steel at 700 oC. Therefore, conventional ausforming thermomechanical treatment is a promising processing route to raise the operating temperature of 9Cr heat-resistant steels., Authors acknowledge financial support to Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MAT2016-80875-C3-1-R) and Comunidad de Madrid (DIMMAT-CM_S2013/MIT-2775). This work is carried out under the auspices of the Joint Programme on Nuclear Materials of the European Energy Research Alliance Pilot Project CREMAR. J. Vivas acknowledges financial support in the form of a FPI Grant BES-2014-069863.
- Published
- 2018
9. Importance of austenitization temperature and ausforming on creep strength in 9Cr ferritic/martensitic steel
- Author
-
M. Houska, Eberhard Altstadt, Javier Vivas, David San-Martin, Carlos Capdevila, Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), and Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades (España)
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Number density ,Materials science ,Mechanical Engineering ,Metallurgy ,Ausforming ,Metals and Alloys ,02 engineering and technology ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Condensed Matter Physics ,Microstructure ,01 natural sciences ,Small punch creep tests ,Creep resistant steels ,Creep ,MX nanoprecipitates ,Mechanics of Materials ,Martensite ,0103 physical sciences ,General Materials Science ,Thermal stability ,0210 nano-technology ,Ductility ,Creep ductility - Abstract
Small Punch Creep technique was used as a screening procedure to evaluate the creep properties of different microstructures developed in a thermomechanical simulator. The goal seek was to generate alternative microstructures in a conventional ferritic-martensitic G91 steel grade which boost thermal stability at temperatures as high as 700 °C. The developed microstructures allow studying the effect of the austenitization temperature optimized by thermodynamic calculations and the ausforming on the creep strength and ductility. The improvement in creep strength recorded was attributable to a higher number density of MX precipitates. By contrast, these microstructures showed an important reduction in creep ductility., Authors acknowledge financial support to Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) through in the form of a Coordinate Project (MAT2016-80875-C3-1-R). The authors are grateful for the dilatometer tests by Phase Transformation laboratory. J. Vivas acknowledges financial support in the form of a FPI Grant BES-2014-069863. This work contributes to the Joint Programme on Nuclear Materials (JPNM) of the European Energy Research Alliance (EERA).
- Published
- 2018
10. Effect of Ausforming Temperature on the Microstructure of G91 Steel
- Author
-
Miguel Benito-Alfonso, David San-Martin, José Antonio Jiménez, Carlos Capdevila, Javier Vivas, Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas (España), Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España), and Comunidad de Madrid
- Subjects
010302 applied physics ,Materials science ,Number density ,Metallurgy ,Metals and Alloys ,Nucleation ,02 engineering and technology ,Lath ,engineering.material ,021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology ,Microstructure ,01 natural sciences ,creep resistant steels ,carbonitrides precipitation ,martensite ,tempering ,thermomechanical treatment ,ferritic/martensitic steel ,MX nanoprecipitates ,Creep ,Martensite ,0103 physical sciences ,Ausforming ,engineering ,General Materials Science ,Tempering ,0210 nano-technology - Abstract
The development of thermomechanical treatments (TMT) has a high potential for improving creep-strength in 9Cr-1Mo ferritic/martensitic steel (ASTM T/P91) to operate at temperatures beyond 600 °C. To maximize the number of nanoscale MX precipitates, an ausforming procedure has been used to increase the number of nucleation sites for precipitation inside the martensite lath. Relative to standard heat treatments (consisting of austenitization at about 1040 °C followed by tempering at about 730 °C) this processing concept has enabled achieving a microstructure containing approximately three orders of magnitude higher number density of MX precipitates having a size around four times smaller in ASTM T/P91 steel. On the other hand; this TMT has little effect on the size and number density of M23C6 particles. The optimized microstructure produced by this TMT route proposed is expected to improve the creep strength of this steel., The authors acknowledge financial support to Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (MINECO) in the form of a Coordinate Project (MAT2016-80875-C3-1-R). The work presented here is done within the Joint Program on Nuclear Materials of the European Energy Research Alliance Pilot Project CREMAR. The authors also would like to acknowledge financial support to Comunidad de Madrid through DIMMAT-CM_S2013/MIT-2775 project., We acknowledge support by the CSIC Open Access Publication Initiative through its Unit of Information Resources for Research (URICI).
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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