Abstract
Ni-based superalloy single-crystal turbine blades are widely used in gas turbines for aircraft propulsion and power generation as they can be subjected to high service temperature and show high mechanical properties due to the almost total elimination of grain boundaries. Particularly in presence of complex geometry shapes, rare grains nucleating apart from the primary grain, become a serious problem in directional solidification, when characterized by high-angle boundaries with the primary grain, extremely brittle due the elevated amount of highly segregating elements and the absence of grain boundary strengthening elements. It is of fundamental importance analyzing the physical mechanisms of formation of stray grains, to understand which thermo-physical and geometrical factors highly influence their formation and to find possible ways to reduce the impact of the problem. In this paper, constrained dendrite growth and heterogeneous grain nucleation theories have been used to model the formation of stray grains in directional solidification of Ni-base superalloys. The study allows to derive the preferred locations of stray grains formation and the role played by the most affecting factors: (i) geometrical: angle of primary grain dendrites with withdrawal direction and orientation of the primary grain with respect to the side walls, responsible for the formation of volumes where the stray grain undercooling is lower than the undercooling of the columnar dendrite tip; (ii) process and alloy: thermal gradient ahead to the solidification front and alloy composition, influencing the columnar dendrite tip undercooling; (iii) wettability of foreign substrates, on which the stray grain undercooling strongly depends.
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