Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys

Includes reprints of author's related articles. === Bibliography: pages 187-201. === The competition between microfracture and plastic flow has been studied in relation to the thermomechanical processing parameters and minor element chemistry of wrought super-ferritic alloys based on a composit...

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Main Author: Wolff, Ira M
Other Authors: Ball, Anthony
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22200
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-222002020-12-10T05:11:01Z Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys Wolff, Ira M Ball, Anthony Ferritic steel - Ductility Iron alloys - Ductility Materials Engineering Includes reprints of author's related articles. Bibliography: pages 187-201. The competition between microfracture and plastic flow has been studied in relation to the thermomechanical processing parameters and minor element chemistry of wrought super-ferritic alloys based on a composition of Fe-40wt% Cr. These alloys have been developed for corrosion-resistant applications, specifically by micro-alloying with platinum group metals to induce cathodic modification, but their use has been hampered by inadequate toughness at ambient temperatures. Brittle cleavage of the alloys is a consequence of the high resistance to plastic flow required to accommodate local stresses, such as those found ahead of a loaded crack. Once initiated, a crack propagates in a brittle manner with minimal ductility. The impact toughness therefore relies on the ability of the alloys to withstand crack initiation. The frequency of the crack initiation events is related to the distribution of secondary phases within the matrix and at the grain boundaries. A direct means of improving the toughness and the ductility is accordingly via annealing cycles and minor alloying additions to control the precipitation of second phases. The ductility is enhanced by raising the mobile dislocation density, and this may be achieved by pre-straining recrystallised material, or increasing the number of dislocation sources in the otherwise source-poor material. The generation of mobile dislocations by prismatic punching at second phase particles in response to local or tessellated stresses was found to increase the ductility and the impact toughness of the alloy. The addition of nickel also increases the brittle fracture resistance by promoting stress accommodation at the crack tip, a result which can, in principle, be explained on the basis of enhanced dislocation dynamics. The tendency of the alloys to form a stable recovered substructure was identified as a critical parameter for both the mechanical and corrosion properties. The low-angle dislocation sub-arrays contribute to overall strain-hardening, but destabilise the passivity of the alloys in acid media. In practice, rationalisation of the microstructural parameters has enabled the practicable fabrication of tough, corrosion-resistant alloys, suitable for commercial development. 2016-10-19T13:35:56Z 2016-10-19T13:35:56Z 1989 Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22200 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment Centre for Materials Engineering
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Ferritic steel - Ductility
Iron alloys - Ductility
Materials Engineering
spellingShingle Ferritic steel - Ductility
Iron alloys - Ductility
Materials Engineering
Wolff, Ira M
Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
description Includes reprints of author's related articles. === Bibliography: pages 187-201. === The competition between microfracture and plastic flow has been studied in relation to the thermomechanical processing parameters and minor element chemistry of wrought super-ferritic alloys based on a composition of Fe-40wt% Cr. These alloys have been developed for corrosion-resistant applications, specifically by micro-alloying with platinum group metals to induce cathodic modification, but their use has been hampered by inadequate toughness at ambient temperatures. Brittle cleavage of the alloys is a consequence of the high resistance to plastic flow required to accommodate local stresses, such as those found ahead of a loaded crack. Once initiated, a crack propagates in a brittle manner with minimal ductility. The impact toughness therefore relies on the ability of the alloys to withstand crack initiation. The frequency of the crack initiation events is related to the distribution of secondary phases within the matrix and at the grain boundaries. A direct means of improving the toughness and the ductility is accordingly via annealing cycles and minor alloying additions to control the precipitation of second phases. The ductility is enhanced by raising the mobile dislocation density, and this may be achieved by pre-straining recrystallised material, or increasing the number of dislocation sources in the otherwise source-poor material. The generation of mobile dislocations by prismatic punching at second phase particles in response to local or tessellated stresses was found to increase the ductility and the impact toughness of the alloy. The addition of nickel also increases the brittle fracture resistance by promoting stress accommodation at the crack tip, a result which can, in principle, be explained on the basis of enhanced dislocation dynamics. The tendency of the alloys to form a stable recovered substructure was identified as a critical parameter for both the mechanical and corrosion properties. The low-angle dislocation sub-arrays contribute to overall strain-hardening, but destabilise the passivity of the alloys in acid media. In practice, rationalisation of the microstructural parameters has enabled the practicable fabrication of tough, corrosion-resistant alloys, suitable for commercial development.
author2 Ball, Anthony
author_facet Ball, Anthony
Wolff, Ira M
author Wolff, Ira M
author_sort Wolff, Ira M
title Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
title_short Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
title_full Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
title_fullStr Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
title_full_unstemmed Ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
title_sort ductility in high chromium super-ferritic alloys
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/22200
work_keys_str_mv AT wolffiram ductilityinhighchromiumsuperferriticalloys
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