Failure behaviors and processing maps with failure domains for hot compression of a powder metallurgy Ni-based superalloy
Processing maps are key to guiding the thermo-mechanical processing (TMP) of superalloys. However, traditional processing maps are incapable of delimiting failure, which is an essential factor to be concerned about during the TMP of superalloys. Employing isothermal hot compression experiments and f...
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Zusammenfassung: | Processing maps are key to guiding the thermo-mechanical processing (TMP) of
superalloys. However, traditional processing maps are incapable of delimiting
failure, which is an essential factor to be concerned about during the TMP of
superalloys. Employing isothermal hot compression experiments and finite
element analysis (FEA), the present study examined the failure behaviors of a
powder metallurgy (P/M) Ni-based superalloy and constructed processing maps
with failure domains based on the predicted failure threshold. The
micromechanical Gurson-Tvergaard-Needleman (GTN) damage model was employed in
the FEA to model the cavity-driven intergranular fracture of the superalloy.
Deformation temperature and strain rate were considered in the range of 1050 ~
1150 C and 0.001 ~ 1 s-1, respectively. The FEA results reveal that the maximum
tensile stress locates at the outer budging surfaces of the samples, which
causes failure initiation and subsequent propagation into longitudinal cracks,
being consistent with the experiments. It is further demonstrated that the
failure is strain-controlled and the critical failure strain remains nearly
insensitive to the range of strain rates considered while increasing with the
increase of temperature in a third-order polynomial. Finally, an optimized
processing window for hot deformation of the superalloy is formulated to
warrant good hot workability while avoiding flow instability and failure. The
present study offers direct insights into the failure behaviors of P/M Ni-based
superalloys and details a modeling strategy to delineate optimized parametric
spaces for the TMP of superalloys. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2208.10665 |