Abstract

Samples of INCONEL* 600 were examined in the mill-annealed and solution-annealed states, and after isothermal annealing at 400 °C and 650 °C. The corrosion behavior of the samples was examined, analytical electron microscopy was used to determine the microstructures present and the chemistry of grain boundaries, and Auger electron spectroscopy was used to measure grain boundary segregation. Samples of different alloys in the mill-annealed state were found to have quite different microstructures, with Cr-rich M7C3 carbides occurring either along grain boundaries or in intragranular sheets. The corrosion behavior of the samples correlated well with the occurrence of grain boundary chromium depletion. Solution annealing at 1190 °C caused dissolution of all carbides, whereas at 1100 °C the carbides either dissolved or the grain boundaries moved away from the carbides, depending upon alloy carbon content. Low-temperature annealing at 400 °C had little effect on millannealed or fully solutionized samples, but in samples with intragranular carbides present, the grain boundaries moved until intersecting or adjacent to the carbides. Isothermal annealing at 650 °C caused carbide nucleation and growth at grain boundaries in fully solutionized samples. Chromium depletion at grain boundaries accompanied carbide precipitation, with a minimum chromium level of 6 wt pct achieved after 5 hours. Healing was found to occur after 100 hours. Solution-annealed samples with intragranular carbides present had more rapid corrosion kinetics since the grain boundaries moved back to the existing carbides. Thermodynamic analysis of the chromium-depletion process showed good agreement with experimental measurements. The Auger results found only boron present at grain boundaries in the mill-annealed state. Aged samples had boron, nitrogen, and phosphorus present, with phosphorus and nitrogen segregating to the greatest extent. The kinetics of phosphorus segregation are much slower at 400 °C compared with 650 °C.

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