Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above

Materials-development projects for advanced ultra-supercritical (A-USC) power plants with steam temperatures of 700 °C and above have been performed in order to achieve high efficiency and low CO2 emissions in Europe, the US, Japan, and recently in China and India as well. These projects involve the...

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Main Author: Fujio Abe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2015-06-01
Series:Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095809916300662
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spelling doaj-ee6a03a9606f4340af0dc74cdb7f2fbe2020-11-24T23:58:00ZengElsevierEngineering2095-80992015-06-011221122410.15302/J-ENG-2015031Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and AboveFujio AbeMaterials-development projects for advanced ultra-supercritical (A-USC) power plants with steam temperatures of 700 °C and above have been performed in order to achieve high efficiency and low CO2 emissions in Europe, the US, Japan, and recently in China and India as well. These projects involve the replacement of martensitic 9%−12% Cr steels with nickel (Ni)-base alloys for the highest temperature boiler and turbine components in order to provide sufficient creep strength at 700°C and above. To minimize the requirement for expensive Ni-base alloys, martensitic 9%−12% Cr steels can be applied to the next highest temperature components of an A-USC power plant, up to a maximum of 650°C. This paper comprehensively describes the research and development of Ni-base alloys and martensitic 9%−12% Cr steels for thick section boiler and turbine components of A-USC power plants, mainly focusing on the long-term creep-rupture strength of base metal and welded joints, strength loss in welded joints, creep-fatigue properties, and microstructure evolution during exposure at elevated temperatures.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095809916300662Ni-base alloy9%−12% Cr steelcreep strengthcreep-fatigue propertywelded jointgrain boundarymicrostructureγ′M23C6 carbide
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Fujio Abe
spellingShingle Fujio Abe
Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above
Engineering
Ni-base alloy
9%−12% Cr steel
creep strength
creep-fatigue property
welded joint
grain boundary
microstructure
γ′
M23C6 carbide
author_facet Fujio Abe
author_sort Fujio Abe
title Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above
title_short Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above
title_full Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above
title_fullStr Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above
title_full_unstemmed Research and Development of Heat-Resistant Materials for Advanced USC Power Plants with Steam Temperatures of 700 °C and Above
title_sort research and development of heat-resistant materials for advanced usc power plants with steam temperatures of 700 °c and above
publisher Elsevier
series Engineering
issn 2095-8099
publishDate 2015-06-01
description Materials-development projects for advanced ultra-supercritical (A-USC) power plants with steam temperatures of 700 °C and above have been performed in order to achieve high efficiency and low CO2 emissions in Europe, the US, Japan, and recently in China and India as well. These projects involve the replacement of martensitic 9%−12% Cr steels with nickel (Ni)-base alloys for the highest temperature boiler and turbine components in order to provide sufficient creep strength at 700°C and above. To minimize the requirement for expensive Ni-base alloys, martensitic 9%−12% Cr steels can be applied to the next highest temperature components of an A-USC power plant, up to a maximum of 650°C. This paper comprehensively describes the research and development of Ni-base alloys and martensitic 9%−12% Cr steels for thick section boiler and turbine components of A-USC power plants, mainly focusing on the long-term creep-rupture strength of base metal and welded joints, strength loss in welded joints, creep-fatigue properties, and microstructure evolution during exposure at elevated temperatures.
topic Ni-base alloy
9%−12% Cr steel
creep strength
creep-fatigue property
welded joint
grain boundary
microstructure
γ′
M23C6 carbide
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2095809916300662
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