The lifetime of steam pipelines in long-term operation in coal-fired power plants are limited due to material damage that resulted from creep exposure. In the present study, the authors comparatively assess the damage of ex-service 12% Cr piping steel with varying degrees of exposure while using accelerated creep tests that employ digital image correlation (DIC) as well as microstructural investigation that is based on electron microscopy. The DIC technique, which allows multiple creep curves to be measured at temperatures ranging from 550–600 °C from a single specimen, revealed higher Zener–Hollomon parameters for a high damage material with a high void density when compared to a material with lower damage and lower void density. Both of the material states showed similar hardness values, subgrain sizes, and boundary character, despite the difference in void densities. Slightly higher inter-particle spacing of MX precipitates results in a lower threshold stress of 79 MPa for the high damage steel when compared to 97 MPa for the low damage material. Besides large Laves phase particles (>0.2 µm) that are found in the higher damaged materials that result in solid solution depletion, the most prominent microstructural damage indicator was a lower density of M23C6 precipitates. Therefore, the observations indicate that the Zener–Hollomon parameter and M23C6 particles are good damage assessment indicators between the most extreme damage states and they predict a lower damage level for a medium void density material.
The electrical properties of zinc oxide (ZnO) thin films of various thicknesses (0.3-4.4 µm) grown by metalorganic chemical vapour deposition on glass substrates have been studied by using temperature-dependent Hall-effect (TDH) measurements in the 18-300 K range. The high quality of the layers has been confirmed with x-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and photoluminescence techniques. TDH measurements indicate the presence of a degenerate layer which significantly influences the low-temperature data. It is found that the measured mobility generally increases with increasing layer thickness, reaching a value of 120 cm 2 V −1 s −1 at room temperature for the 4.4 µm thick sample. The lateral grain size of the layers is also found to increase with thickness indicating a clear correlation between the size of the surface grains and the electrical properties of corresponding films. Theoretical fits to the Hall data suggest that the bulk conduction of the layers is dominated by a weakly compensated donor with activation energy in the 33-41 meV range and concentration of the order of 10 17 cm −3 , as well as a total acceptor concentration of mid-10 15 cm −3 . Grain boundary scattering is found to be an important limiting factor of the mobility throughout the temperature range considered.
Self-assembly due to phase separation within a miscibility gap is important in numerous material systems and applications. A system of particular interest is the binary alloy system Fe-Cr, since it is both a suitable model material and the base system for the stainless steel alloy category, suffering from low-temperature embrittlement due to phase separation. Structural characterization of the minute nano-scale concentration fluctuations during early phase separation has for a long time been considered a major challenge within material characterization. However, recent developments present new opportunities in this field. Here, we present an overview of the current capabilities and limitations of different techniques. A set of Fe-Cr alloys were investigated using small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), atom probe tomography, and analytical transmission electron microscopy. The complementarity of the characterization techniques is clear, and combinatorial studies can provide complete quantitative structure information during phase separation in Fe-Cr alloys. Furthermore, we argue that SANS provides a unique in-situ access to the nanostructure, and that direct comparisons between SANS and phase-field modeling, solving the non-linear Cahn Hilliard equation with proper physical input, should be pursued.
The effective operation of ageing coal-fired power plants requires routine damage assessment of critical component materials throughout their service history. Traditional post-exposure mechanical testing typically requires large amounts of material for each testing condition. This study introduces an accelerated (high stress and temperature) creep testing technique that employs digital image correlation for strain measurement over a non-uniform temperature field generated by a thermomechanical tester. When applied to different ex-service (exposed to service conditions within a power plant) 12% Cr piping steels, multiple accelerated creep curves at temperatures ranging from 550°C to 600°C are measured from a single specimen for each material condition. Higher creep damage in the steel due to longer service exposure and higher void densities is revealed by shorter rupture times, faster creep rates and tertiary-dominated creep curves when compared to the lower creep damage state. Microstructural study via quantitative electron microscopy confirms the dislocation creep-driven growth of subgrains in the specimen gauge regions relative to the grips. Larger subgrains and a weakening of precipitate distributions for the high damage material were also noted. Digital image correlation–measured strains are in good agreement with traditional techniques of creep testing with standard extensometry. On a comparative basis, the technique is shown to be a plausible form of damage assessment of 12% Cr piping steels with varying levels of service exposure and serve as a suitable mechanical complement to the traditional void replica methodology.
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