Title: Materials at High temperature , Creep
1Materials at High temperature , Creep
2Materials at High Temperature
Microstructure Change Stability of
Materials Grain growth Second-phase
coarsening Increasing vacancy density Mechanical
Properties Change Softening Increasing of
atoms mobility Increasing of dislocations
mobility (climb) Additional slip systems
3Time-dependent Mechanical Behavior - Creep
Creep A time-dependent and permanent
deformation of materials when subjected to a
constant load at a high temperature (gt 0.4 Tm).
Examples turbine blades, steam generators.
4Creep Testing
5Creep Curve
Typical creep curve under constant load
6Creep Curve
1. Instantaneous deformation, mainly elastic. 2.
Primary/transient creep. Slope of strain vs. time
decreases with time work-hardening 3.
Secondary/steady-state creep. Rate of straining
is constant balance of work-hardening and
recovery. 4. Tertiary. Rapidly accelerating
strain rate up to failure formation of internal
cracks, voids, grain boundary separation,
necking, etc.
7Creep Curve Constant Stress
Comparison between constant load and constant
stress
8Parameters of Creep Behavior
The stage secondary/steady-state creep is of
longest duration and the steady-state creep rate
is the most important parameter of the creep
behavior in long-life applications. Another
parameter, especially important in short-life
creep situations, is time to rupture, or the
rupture lifetime, tr.
9Parameters of Creep Behavior
10Power-Law Creep
Where n, the creep exponent, usually lies between
3 and 8. This sort of creep is called power-law
creep.
11Power-Law Creep
12Creep Stress and Temperature Effects
13Creep Stress and Temperature Effects
- With increasing stress or temperature
- The instantaneous strain increases
- The steady-state creep rate increases
- The time to rupture decreases
14Creep Stress and Temperature Effects
The stress/temperature dependence of the
steady-state creep rate can be described by
where Qc is the activation energy for creep, K2
is the creep resistant, and n is a material
constant.
(Remember the Arrhenius dependence on temperature
for thermally activated processes that we
discussed for diffusion?)
15Creep Stress and Temperature Effects
16Creep Stress and Temperature Effects
17Larson-Miller Relation for Creep
Since
18Larson-Miller Plot
Extrapolate low-temperature data from fast
high-temperature tests
19Creep Relaxation
Creep Relaxation At constant displacement,
stress relaxes with time.
20Creep Relaxation
(4)
21Creep Relaxation
Integrating from ? ?i at t 0 to ? ? at t
t gives
(5)
As the time going on, the initial elastic strain
?i/E is slowly replaced by creep strain, and the
stress relaxes.
22Creep Damage Creep Fracture
Void Formation and Linkage
23Creep Damage Creep Fracture
Damage Accumulation
24Creep Damage Creep Fracture
Since the mechanism for void growth is the same
as that for creep deformation (notably through
diffusion), it follows that the time to failure,
tf, will follow in accordance with
25Creep Damage Creep Fracture
As a general rule
?ss ? tf C
Where C is a constant, roughly 0.1. So, knowing
the creep rate, the life can be estimated.
26Creep Damage Creep Fracture
Creep rupture Diagram
27Creep Design
- In high-temperature design it is important to
make sure - that the creep strain ?cr during the design life
is acceptable - that the creep ductility ?fcr (strain to
failure) is adequate to cope with the acceptable
creep strain - that the time-to-failure, tf, at the design
loads and temperatures is longer (by a suitable
safety factor) than the design life.
28Creep Design
- Designing metals ceramics to resist power-law
creep - Choose a material with a high melting point
- Maximize obstructions to dislocation motion by
alloying to give a solid solution and
precipitates the precipitates must be stable at
the service temperature - Choose a solid with a large lattice resistance
this means covalent bonding.
29Creep Design
- Designing metals ceramics to resist diffusional
flow - Choose a material with a high melting point
- Arrange that it has a large grain size, so that
diffusion distances are long and GBs do not help
diffusion much - Arrange for precipitates at GBs to impede GB
sliding.
30Creep Resist Materials
31Creep Resist Materials
32Creep Resist Materials
33Case Study Turbine Blade
General Electric TF34 High Bypass Turbofan Engine
For (1) U.S. Navy Lockheed S-3A anti submarine
warfare aircraft (2) U.S. Air Force
Fairchild Republic A-10 close support aircraft.
34Case Study Turbine Blade
35Case Study Turbine Blade
Alloy requirements for turbine blades
(a) Resistance to creep
(b) Resistance to high-temperature oxidation
(c) Toughness
(d) Thermal fatigue resistance
(e) Thermal stability
(f) Low density
36Turbine Blade Materials Nickel-base Superalloys
Composition of typical creep-resistant blade
37Turbine Blade Materials Nickel-base Superalloys
- Microstructures of the alloy
- Has as many atoms in solid solution as possible (
Co, W, Cr) - (2) Forms stable, hard precipitates of compounds
like Ni3Al, Ni3Ti, MoC, TaC to obstruct the
dislocations - (3) Forms a protective surface oxide film of
Cr2O3 to protect the blade itself from attack by
oxygen
38Turbine Blade Materials Nickel-base Superalloys
Microstructures of the alloy
39Turbine Blade Development of Processing
Investment Casting of turbine blades
40Turbine Blade Development of Processing
Directional Solidification (DS) of turbine blades
41Turbine Blade Blade Cooling
Air-Cooled Blades