Revealing microstructural degradation mechanism induced by interdiffusion between Amdry365 coating and IN792 superalloy
Journal article, 2024

Metallic coatings are widely employed to improve the oxidation resistance of superalloys. However, the interdiffusion between the metallic coatings and the superalloys leads to microstructural degradation in both. Some of the underlying degradation mechanisms are still elusive, e.g., the γ′ (Ni3Al) phase depletion in superalloys, where a large amount of γ′ precipitates are dissolved in the γ matrix even though the incoming Al from coatings indeed increases the Al content. Here, we investigated the interdiffusion behavior between the Amdry365 coating and the IN792 superalloy at 1100 °C, using multiple microscopic techniques and thermodynamics calculations. Our results showed an excellent agreement between experiments and thermodynamics simulations, indicating the dominant role of Al on the initial diffusion-induced phase transitions. We proposed the Al-Cr interference effect to account for the pile-up behavior of Cr and the reduced Al content near the coating/superalloy interface. The local phase equilibrium calculations revealed that the γ′ depletion in the superalloy is primarily attributed to the loss of γ′-forming elements, such as Ta and Ti. Our findings opened up an avenue for studies on the superalloy/coating interdiffusion, contributing to reducing this damaging impact.

Interdiffusion

Microstructural degradation

Bond coating

Thermodynamics

Author

Xiaoyu Sun

Linköping University

Xiaolong Li

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Sheng Guo

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Xin Yu

Yantai University

Lilong Zhu

Yantai University

Jianwei Teng

Yantai University

Liang Jiang

Yantai University

JJ Moverare

Linköping University

Xin Hai Li

Siemens Energy

Ru Lin Peng

Linköping University

Materials and Design

0264-1275 (ISSN) 1873-4197 (eISSN)

Vol. 241 112937

Subject Categories

Materials Chemistry

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1016/j.matdes.2024.112937

More information

Latest update

6/14/2024