Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Grain Size on the Creep Behavior of an Austenitic Iron-Base Alloy

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. Garofalo W. F. Domis F. von Gemmingen
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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8
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2238 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1964

Abstract

The effect of rain size on the creep behavior of an austenitic iron-base alloy has been studied at 1300° F under conditions of constant stress. The average grain diameter varied between 9 and 190 p (ASTM 10.7-2). The subgrain size and apparent activation energy for creep were not found to depend in any systematic manner on gain size. Grain hozmdary serrations were observed in all specimens tested. The variation of the secondary-creep rate, 2,, with the pain diameter, 1, is given by: es = K(213m + 1 )/l.]; 1, is the grain diameter zohere is reaches a minimum. Results in the literature shoujthat 1,increases as the temperature increases. At low creep temperatures is is therefore proportional to 12, at intermediate temperatures <, exhibits a minimum, and at high creep temperatures is is proportional to 1/1. The dependence ofis on the stress, u, is given by: t, = A" (sinh acrln, a and n show little variation with 1. The dependence of A" on 1 is given by: A" = KA[(21k + 13)/1]. For 1 » >>lmn = 4, and at constant values 01- isat lozu stress levels, the steady-state stress is given by the Hall-Petch relation. The variation of c, with grain size is believed to he associated particularly with grain boundary generation of dislocations which becomes more important with increasing temperatures. SEEMINGLY inconsistent experimental findings have led to a certain amount of confusion concerning the effect of grain size on creep behavior. The confusion is attributed to a lack of test results obtained over sufficiently wide ranges in grain size, stress, and temperature. Experimental results presented in this paper and results available in the literature1-5 show a consistent behavior and lead to a unified concept for the dependence of secondary-or steady-state creep rate on grain size. In accordance with this concept, which is substantiated experimentally, secondary-creep rate should increase with increasing grain diameter at low creep temperatures, leading to greater creep strengths for fine-grained materials. At intermediate temperatures the secondary-creep rate should decrease to a minimum and then increase as the grain size is increased. At high creep temperatures the secondary-creep rate should decrease with increasing grain size, leading to greater creep strengths for coarse-grained materials. Whether a temperature is high or low for creep in a metal or alloy depends primarily on its melting temperature. MATERIAL AND TEST PROCEDURES The material tested was an austenitic iron-base alloy of the following composition (wt pct): C, 0.005; N, 0.017; Mn, 1.26; Ni, 14.21; and Cr, 17.18. Two 15 -lb ingots were forged and hot-rolled to 5/8-in.-diam bars which were then cold-rolled and cold-swaged to a diameter of 0.49 in. These were sectioned into 3-in.-long blanks and heat-treated at various temperatures to obtain different grain sizes. The procedures employed and the results obtained are summarized in Table I. The secondary treatment at 1400° F followed the primary treatment without intermediate cooling to room temperature. This final treatment was employed to minimize various effects arising from heating to different temperatures during the primary treatment, particularly differences in intragranular dislocation structure, segregation of interstitial atoms at grain boundaries, and density of grain boundary ledges. The intragranular dislocation structure was examined by electron transmission metallography after each of the treatments described in Table I. Isolated dislocations and a few tangles were observed but no evidence of subgrains was found after any of the treatments. No grain-size effect was evident on the density and distribution of dislocations. Stabilization of grain boundary structure is particularly important because, as will be discussed later, grain boundaries influence high-temperature creep behavior. Magnetic-permeability measurements after each treatment and
Citation

APA: F. Garofalo W. F. Domis F. von Gemmingen  (1964)  Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Grain Size on the Creep Behavior of an Austenitic Iron-Base Alloy

MLA: F. Garofalo W. F. Domis F. von Gemmingen Institute of Metals Division - Effect of Grain Size on the Creep Behavior of an Austenitic Iron-Base Alloy. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1964.

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