Abstract
Oxygen-affected cracking commonly presents on thin Ni-based single crystal superalloy components serving in high temperature and oxidizing environments. This study uses a newly developed in-situ thermal-stress environmental transmission electron microscope to investigate the oxidation and fracture behaviors of Ni-based single crystal superalloy at 650°C under stress. The in-situ oxidation was found to change the tensile fracture mode from the close-packed {111} planes of plastic fracture to (Formula presented.) planes adjacent to γ/γ′ interfaces of brittle fracture. The microanalysis also revealed that the γ′ cuboids, γ phase, and γ/γ interface exhibit different oxidation behavior, thus underscoring the thickness debit effect.
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Li, X., Liu, Y., Zhao, Y., Chen, Y., Li, A., Zhang, J., … Han, X. (2021). Oxygen changes crack modes of Ni-based single crystal superalloy. Materials Research Letters, 9(12), 531–539. https://doi.org/10.1080/21663831.2021.1993367
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