4.7 Article

Effects of processing heterogeneities on the micro- to nanostructure strengthening mechanisms of an alloy 718 turbine disk

Journal

MATERIALS & DESIGN
Volume 212, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.matdes.2021.110295

Keywords

Superalloy, forging; Direct ageing; Recrystallization; Strengthening

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council (Australia) [LP180100144, LP190101169]
  2. Australian Research Council (Australia) DECRA Fellowship scheme [DE180100440]
  3. UNSW Scientia Fellowship scheme
  4. Australian Research Council [LP180100144, LP190101169] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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Advancements in thermo-mechanical processing of Ni-based superalloys enable manufacturing of engineering parts with superior mechanical properties. Forged aeroengine disks exhibit radial microstructural heterogeneities from both pre-materials and prior processing, where localized meta-dynamic recrystallization and strain areas accelerate grain growth and precipitation of strengthening phases, while direct ageing successfully mitigates radial property heterogeneities. Strength after direct ageing is mainly provided by precipitation strengthening, with low impact from variations in grain boundary strengthening, work hardening, and solid solution strengthening.
Advancements in thermo-mechanical processing of Ni-based superalloys enable manufacturing of engineering parts with superior mechanical properties. Forged aeroengine disks exhibit radial microstructural heterogeneities from both pre-materials and prior processing. Here we correlate microstructural variations in an industrially forged alloy 718 aeroengine disks to their processing history via finite element simulations. We examine a disk intentionally manufactured to exhibit hardness variations. Several radial positions are characterized to reveal twin boundaries and delta phase fractions prior to ageing and grain size, geometrically necessary dislocation (GND) densities, chemical compositions, gamma' and gamma '' precipitates in both as-forged and direct aged conditions. We find that localized meta-dynamic recrystallization causes accelerated grain growth in low hardness regions, while highly strained areas accelerate precipitation of strengthening phases. In these areas, the direct ageing effect is weakened by the presence of non-shearable coarsened gamma '' precipitates. Overall, direct ageing is shown to successfully mitigate radial property heterogeneities. We underpin this by a strengthening model elucidating the direct ageing effect on the reduction of hardness heterogeneity. Variations in grain boundary strengthening, work hardening, and solid solution strengthening after direct ageing have low impact on hardness variations, where precipitation strengthening provides as much as 44% of the strength after direct ageing. (C) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.

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