Abstract

In this work, the microstructures of superalloy specimens produced using selective electron beam melting additive manufacturing were characterized. The materials were produced using a CMSX-4 powder. Two selective electron beam melting processing strategies, which result in higher and lower effective cooling rates, are described. Orientation imaging microscopy, scanning transmission electron microscopy and conventional high resolution transmission electron microscopy are used to investigate the microstructures. Our results suggest that selective electron beam melting processing results in near equilibrium microstructures, as far as γ′ volume fractions, the formation of small amounts of TCP phases and the partitioning behavior of the alloy elements are concerned. As expected, higher cooling rates result in smaller dendrite spacings, which are two orders of magnitude smaller than observed during conventional single crystal casting. During processing, columnar grains grow in <100> directions, which are rotated with respect to each other. There are coarse γ/γ′ microstructures in high angle boundary regions. Dislocation networks form low angle boundaries. A striking feature of the as processed selective electron beam melting specimens is their high dislocation density. From a fundamental point of view, this opens new possibilities for the investigation of elementary dislocation processes which accompany solidification.

Highlights

  • Ni-base single crystal superalloys are cast materials, which are used to make blades for gas turbines in aero engines and power plants [1,2,3]

  • Figure was taken at lower (STEM micro-probe mode)

  • The transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results confirm the findings reported above

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Summary

Introduction

Ni-base single crystal superalloys are cast materials, which are used to make blades for gas turbines in aero engines and power plants [1,2,3]. This second generation superalloy contains refractory alloy elements like W, Ta, and Re. This second generation superalloy contains refractory alloy elements like W, Ta, and Re These elements provide good creep strength because their atomic mobility is low, which retards dislocation climb in the γ and in the γ0 phase [4]. It is well known and it has been recently shown for the single crystal superalloy ERBO-1 (CMSX-4 derivate) [5] that cast Ni-base superalloys are prone to segregation during solidification. Cast SX are characterized by a microstructural and chemical heterogeneity on the length scale of the dendrite spacing (average value: 500 μm [5])

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