Abstract

In the present work, we investigate the stress and temperature dependence of low-temperature (750 ± 20 °C) and high-stress (300 ± 20 MPa) shear creep of a Ni-base single crystal superalloy. From continuous isothermal experiments and stress and temperature change tests the stress exponent n and the apparent activation energy Qapp of the phenomenological Sherby-Dorn equation were determined for the two macroscopic crystallographic shear systems (MCSS) [011¯](111) and [112¯](111). The activation parameters of creep, the stress exponents and the apparent activation energies were identified as 16 and 620 kJ/mol (MCSS: [011¯](111)) and 14 and 460 kJ/mol (MCSS: [112¯](111)). We show that during shear creep testing these phenomenological parameters do not change between the early (0.5–1% strain) and later stages of creep (4.5–5% strain), in contrast to what was observed for uniaxial tensile testing. The results are discussed in the light of what is known about stress and temperature dependencies of deformation rates in the creep literature and in view of the recent work by Bürger et al., 2020, who combined shear creep testing with analytical transmission electron microscopy to identify the elementary deformation mechanism, which governs low temperature and high stress creep.

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