Abstract
Increased interest has been paid to grain boundary segregation in alloy K-500 due to severe intergranular cracking recently observed in forged bars. However, little systematic study of this segregation has been performed so far. A detailed auger electron spectroscopy (AES) study of grain boundary segregation in alloy K-500 has been carried out as a function of alloy chemistry. To determine C segregation, the C and O contamination rates in a vacuum chamber were measured and the necessary condition for C grain boundary segregation determination was established. It has been found that severe C, Al, and Cu segregation to grain boundaries occurred and depended on alloy chemistry. High bulk Ni and low bulk Al promoted C and Al grain boundary segregation, and low bulk Ni and high bulk Al significantly enhanced Cu segregation to grain boundaries. The depth profiles of intergranularly segregated elements also showed different features for high and low Ni content alloys. In high Ni alloys, C and Al levels dropped continuously as a function of distance from the grain boundaries but the Cu level dropped only slightly. In low Ni alloys, the Al and C levels rose from relatively low grain boundary levels to a peak at a certain distance from the grain boundary where the high grain boundary Cu level dramatically dropped. Transmission electron microscope (TEM) observation revealed a grain boundaryγ′-depleted zone followed by a region with coarser and denserγ′ particles in low Ni and high Al alloys but quite uniformly distributedγ′ particles with no depleted zone in high Ni and low Al alloys. These can be explained by the observed segregation behavior. The occurrence of Cu segregation is explained according to available theories about surface segregation in binary Ni-Cu alloys, and the segregation of C and Al to grain boundaries is suggested to be probably due to their interaction with Ni and Cu.
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