Abstract

New ferritic steels with a controlled addition of boron have been developed recently for ultrasuper-critical fossil power plants. These steels possess excellent creep resistance compared to conventional steels like P91, P92, P122, etc., and this has been attributed to the delay in coarsening of the carbides during creep owing to partial replacement of carbon by boron in these carbides. However, the susceptibility of the weld joints of the boron-containing ferritic steels to type IV cracking, which significantly brings down the rupture life of the weld joints, has not been investigated so far. In the present work, the creep properties of recently developed 9Cr-3W-3Co-NbV steels with boron contents varying from 47 to 180 ppm and of their weld joints have been studied. Creep tests were carried out at 923 K in the stress range of 140 to 80 MPa. Specimens were examined for particle coarsening using field-emission scanning electron microscopy, and the boron content in the precipitates was estimated using field-emission auger electron spectroscopy (FE-AES). The grain size of the parent metal and the heat-affected zone (HAZ) were estimated using electron backscattered pattern (EBSP) imaging. Results showed that the creep properties of the steels with 90 and 130 ppm boron and of their weld joints are superior to those of the P92 steels and its weld joints. Further, no weld joints exhibited type IV cracking. No significant coarsening of the carbides was observed, not only in the parent metal but also in the HAZ of the steels with ≥90 ppm of boron. In addition to the delay in carbide coarsening, the large prior-austenite grain size of the parent metal and the absence of a conventional fine-grained HAZ (FGHAZ) in the weld joints also seem to have a beneficial effect on improving the creep properties of these steels and their weld joints.

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