Microstructure and mechanical properties of two Z-phase strengthened 12%Cr martensitic steels: the effects of Cu and C
Journal article, 2017

Z-phase strengthened 12% Cr steels are designed to combine good corrosion and creep resistance for applications in fossil fuel power plants with steam temperatures up to 650 °C. Two trial Z-phase strengthened steels were investigated, Z-steel with ultra-low C content, and ZCuC-steel with relatively high C content and Cu addition. The Z-steel has better creep strength; however, the alloy has low impact toughness due to the formation of continuous Laves-phase films at grain boundaries. Atom probe tomography, transmission electron microscopy, and scanning electron microscopy were employed to study the effects of C and Cu on the microstructure of the two steels in the as-tempered condition, and after ageing for different times. The Z-steel shows a fast transformation from TaN to Z-phase. The relatively high C content in the ZCuC-steel resulted in the formation of two categories of MX: Ta(C, N) and TaN. The phase transformation from Ta(C, N) to Z-phase is slower compared to that from TaN to Z-phase. In addition, precipitation of M23C6 and Cu particles in the ZCuC-steel led to easier nucleation of Laves-phase, and hence a much improved toughness.

Atom probe tomography

Impact toughness

Laves-phase

Electron microscopy

Precipitation

Creep

Author

Masoud Rashidi

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Microstructure

Lennart Johansson

Siemens Energy

Hans-Olof Andrén

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Microstructure

Fang Liu

Microstructure Physics

Materials Science & Engineering A: Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing

0921-5093 (ISSN)

Vol. 694 57-65

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

Infrastructure

Chalmers Materials Analysis Laboratory

DOI

10.1016/j.msea.2017.03.113

More information

Latest update

3/4/2022 8