Abstract
AbstractIt is essential for materials used at high‐temperatures in corrosive atmosphere to maintain their specific properties, such as good creep resistance, long fatigue life and sufficient high‐temperature corrosion resistance. Usually, the corrosion resistance results from the formation of a protective scale with very low porosity, good adherence, high mechanical and thermodynamic stability and slow growth rate. Standard engineering materials in power generation technology are low‐Cr steels. However, steels with higher Cr content, e.g., austenitic steels, or Ni‐base alloys are used for components applied to more severe service conditions, e.g., more aggressive atmospheres and higher temperatures. Three categories of alloys were investigated in this study. These materials were oxidised in laboratory air at temperatures of 550°C in the case of low‐alloy steels, 750°C in the case of an austenitic steel (TP347) and up to 1000°C in the case of the Ni‐base superalloys Inconel 625 Si and Inconel 718. Emphasis was put on the role of grain size on the internal and external oxidation processes. For this purpose various grain sizes were established by means of recrystallization heat treatment. In the case of low‐Cr steels, thermogravimetric measurements revealed a substantially higher mass gain for steels with smaller grain sizes. This observation was attributed to the role of alloy grain boundaries as short‐circuit diffusion paths for inward oxygen transport. For the austenitic steel, the situation is the other way round. The scale formed on specimens with smaller grain size consists mainly of Cr2O3 with some FeCr2O4 at localized sites, while for specimens with larger grain size a non‐protective Fe oxide scale is formed. This finding supports the idea that substrate grain boundaries accelerate the chromium supply to the oxide/alloy phase interface. Finally, in the Ni‐base superalloys deep intergranular oxidation attack was observed, taking place preferentially along random high‐angle grain boundaries.
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