Abstract

High temperature titanium alloys are being urgently developed owing to the requirements of advanced aerospace industry. Performance of the alloys in service under high-temperature environments always attracts great attention. In this study, variations of microstructure and mechanical property in TC25 (Ti-6.5Al-2Mo-1Zr-1Sn-1 W-0.2Si) dual-phase high temperature titanium alloy subjected to thermal exposure have been systematically investigated by coupling microstructural characterization, compositional analyses and mechanical measurement. It is found that strength is significantly enhanced while ductility is sharply degraded when the alloy is thermally exposed at 550 °C for a long duration of 100 h. Microstructural observations manifest that ternary α-needles (αt) are drastically precipitated from β-ligaments inside transformed β-matrix (βtrans) whilst α2 (Ti3Al)-phase is produced from primary α-phase (αp) through ordered transformation. The precipitation of αt-needles is promoted by β-phase metastability resulting from insufficient element partitioning in the initial microstructure. The β-phase stability also renders αt-precipitation encounter size effect of β-ligaments, where the precipitation is suppressed when β-ligaments are thin in size. Both precipitation of αt-needles and α2-phase triggers precipitation-hardening effect, which results in strain localization and thereby regresses alloy ductility. However, further analysis indicates that compared with α2-phase, αt-precipitation plays more adverse role in embrittlement in the current alloy. This is different from thermal-exposed behavior of most of high temperature titanium alloys reported in literatures. These findings enrich our fundamental understanding on thermal stability of high temperature titanium alloys, and provide plausible implication to improve high temperature performance via controlling phase precipitation.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call