Abstract

Premature breakdown of creep strength is a serious problem to be solved in long-term creep of advanced high Cr ferritic steels. The material studied was ASTM grade 92 steel crept at 550–650 °C for up to 63 151 h. Stress exponent for rupture life decreases from 17 in short-term creep to 8 in long-term creep, confirming the breakdown in the steel. The steel shows ductile to brittle transition with increasing rupture life, and the breakdown accords with the onset of brittle intergranular fracture. Creep cavities are nucleated at coarse precipitates of Laves phase along grain boundaries. These findings suggest the following story of the breakdown of creep strength. Laves phase precipitates and grows during creep exposure. Coarsening of Laves phase particles over a critical size triggers the cavity formation and the consequent brittle intergranular fracture. The brittle fracture causes the breakdown. The coarsening of Laves phase can be detected non-destructively by means of hardness testing of the steel exposed to elevated temperature without stress.

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