Modeling of oxygen diffusion along grain boundaries in a nickel-based superalloy
journal contribution
posted on 2012-11-13, 10:17authored byLiguo Zhao
Finite element analyses of oxygen diffusion at the grain level have been carried out for a
polycrystalline nickel-based superalloy, aiming to quantify the oxidation damage under
surface oxidation conditions at high temperature. Grain microstructures were considered
explicitly in the finite element model where the grain boundary was taken as the primary
path for oxygen diffusion. The model has been used to simulate natural diffusion of oxygen
at temperatures between 650 C and 800 C, which are controlled by the parabolic
oxidation rate and oxygen diffusivity. To study the effects of mechanical stress on oxygen
diffusion, a sequentially coupled deformation-diffusion analysis was carried out for a
generic specimen geometry under creep loading condition using a submodeling technique.
The material constitutive behavior was described by a crystal plasticity model at
the grain level and a unified viscoplasticity model at the global level, respectively. The
stress-assisted oxygen diffusion was driven by the gradient of hydrostatic stress in terms
of pressure factor. Heterogeneous deformation presented at the grain level imposes a
great influence on oxygen diffusion at 750 C and above, leading to further penetration
of oxygen into the bulk material. Increased load level and temperature enhance oxygen
concentration and penetration within the material. At 700 C and below, mechanical
loading seems to have negligible influence on the oxygen penetration because of the
extremely low values of oxygen diffusivity and pressure factor. In the case of an existing
surface microcrack, oxygen tends to accumulate around the crack tip due to the high
stress level presented near the crack tip, leading to localized material embrittlement and
promotion of rapid crack propagation.
History
School
Mechanical, Electrical and Manufacturing Engineering
Citation
ZHAO, L., 2011. Modeling of oxygen diffusion along grain boundaries in a nickel-based superalloy. Journal of Engineering Materials and Technology, 133, pp.031002-1 - 031002-7.