Abstract
Precipitation, a major solid state phase transformation during heat treatment processes, has for more than one century been intensively employed to improve the strength and toughness of various high performance alloys. Recently, sophisticated precipitation reaction models, in assistance with well-developed CALPHAD databases, provide an efficient and cost-effective way to tailor precipitate microstructures that maximize the strengthening effect via the optimization of alloy chemistries and heat treatment schedules. In this presentation, we focus on simulating precipitate microstructure evolution in Nickel-base superalloys under arbitrary heat treatment conditions. The newly-developed TC-PRISMA program has been used for these simulations, with models refined especially for non-isothermal conditions. The effect of different cooling profiles on the formation of multimodal microstructures has been thoroughly examined in order to understand the underlying thermodynamics and kinetics. Meanwhile, validations against several experimental results have been carried out. Practical issues that are critical to the accuracy and applicability of the current simulations, such as modifications that overcome mean-field approximations, compatibility between CALPHAD databases, selection of key parameters (particularly interfacial energy and nucleation site densities), etc., are also addressed.
Access provided by Autonomous University of Puebla. Download to read the full chapter text
Chapter PDF
Similar content being viewed by others
References
Q. Chen et al. TC-PRISMA user’s guide and examples. Thermo-Calc Software AB, Stockholm, Sweden, http://www.thermocalc.se/Library.htm; 2011.
Thermo-Calc Software AB. Stockholm, Sweden, http://www.thermocalc.se/.
N. Saunders, and A. P. Miodownik. CALPHAD (Calculation of Phase Diagrams): A Comperhensive Guide.(New York: Elsevier Science Ltd.; 1998).
J. S. Langer, and A. J. Schwartz. “Kinetics of nucleation in near-critical fluids”, Phys Rev A 21(1980), 948–58.
R. Kampmann, and R. Wagner. “Kinetics of precipitation in metastable binary alloys — theory and application”, Decomposition of alloys: the early stages, ed. P. Haasen et al.(Oxford: Pergamon Press, 1984), 91–103.
H. J. Jou et al. “Computer simulations for the prediction of microstructure/property variation in aeroturbine disks”, Superalloy 2004. ed. K. A. Green et al. (Seven Springs, PA: TMS, 2004), 877–86.
N. Saunders et al. “The application of Calphad calculations to Ni-based superalloys”, Superalloys 2000. ed. K. A. Green et al. (Warrendale, PA: TMS, 2000), 803–11.
T. Rojhirunsakool et al. “Influence of composition on monomodal versus multimodal γ’ precipitation in Ni-Al-Cr alloys”, J Mater Sci 48(2013), 825–31.
R. Radis et al. “Evolution of size and morphology of γ’ precipitates in Udimet 720 Li during continuous cooling”, Superalloys 2008. ed. R. C. Reed et al. (Seven Springs, PA: TMS, 2008), 829–36.
R. Radis et al. “Multimodal size distributions of γ’ precipitates during continuous cooling of UDIMET 720 Li”, Acta Mater 57(2009), 5739–47.
J. Mao et al. “Cooling precipitation and strengthening study in powder metallurgy superalloy U720LI”, Metall Mater Trans A 32A(2001), 2441–52.
M. P. Jackson, and R. C. Reed. “Heat treatment of UDIMET 720Li: the effect of microstructure on properties”, Mater Sci Eng A259(1999), 85–97.
P. M. Sarosi et al. “Formation of multimodal size distributions of γ’ in a nickel-base superalloy during interrupted continuous cooling”, Scripta Materialia 57(2007), 767–70.
Y. H. Wen et al. “Phase-field modeling of bimodal particle size distributions during continuous cooling”, Acta Mater 51(2003), 1123–32.
Author information
Authors and Affiliations
Editor information
Editors and Affiliations
Rights and permissions
Copyright information
© 2013 TMS (The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society)
About this chapter
Cite this chapter
Wu, K. et al. (2013). Simulations of Precipitate Microstructure Evolution during Heat Treatment. In: Li, M., Campbell, C., Thornton, K., Holm, E., Gumbsch, P. (eds) Proceedings of the 2nd World Congress on Integrated Computational Materials Engineering (ICME). Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-48194-4_32
Download citation
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-48194-4_32
Publisher Name: Springer, Cham
Print ISBN: 978-3-319-48585-0
Online ISBN: 978-3-319-48194-4
eBook Packages: Chemistry and Materials ScienceChemistry and Material Science (R0)