Article Short fatigue crack growth mechanism in Ni-Co based superalloy at elevated temperatures and in oxidative atmospheres

Hideaki Nishikawa SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials ScienceROR) ; Kishan Habib (National Institute for Materials Science) ; Yoshiyuki Furuya SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials ScienceROR) ; Toru Hara SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials ScienceROR) ; Toshio Osada SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials ScienceROR) ; Kyoko Kawagishi SAMURAI ORCID (National Institute for Materials ScienceROR)

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Hideaki Nishikawa, Kishan Habib, Yoshiyuki Furuya, Toru Hara, Toshio Osada, Kyoko Kawagishi. Short fatigue crack growth mechanism in Ni-Co based superalloy at elevated temperatures and in oxidative atmospheres. MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING A-STRUCTURAL MATERIALS PROPERTIES MICROSTRUCTURE AND PROCESSING. 2023, 885 (), 145655-145655. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2023.145655
SAMURAI

Description:

(abstract)

In this study, to elucidate the oxidation effect on the short fatigue crack growth (SFCG) characteristics of Ni-Co based TMW-4M3 superalloy, fatigue tests were conducted at room/elevated temperature in air/vacuum and three-dimensional microscopic observation of the SFCs using a plasma focused ion beam – scanning electron microscope (PFIB – SEM) system. Fatigue lives tested under vacuum at elevated temperature were comparable to those at room temperature while those tested at elevated temperatures in air showed shorter fatigue life in higher stress regions and longer fatigue life in lower stress regions than the others. In situ observation of SFCs at elevated temperatures in air revealed SFCG deceleration in the small ΔK regions and acceleration in large ΔK regions. SFCs opening/closing behaviours at elevated temperatures measured by digital image correlation (DIC) showed the crack opening stress to be higher at elevated temperature in air, possibly due to oxide-induced crack closure. However, the crack closure effect did not fully explain the difference in FCG rate between room and elevated temperatures in air. Three-dimensional investigations revealed SFCs to form at elevated temperatures in air, showing straight transgranular FCG to be insensitive to microstructure in slow growth regions, and intergranular FCG to precede that in the surrounding material in fast growth regions, in contrast to microstructural SFCs features at room temperature. It appears that slow and straight unique SFCG at elevated temperatures might occur due to intermittent brittle fracture of oxides formed at the crack tip. This suggests a possible role of the oxide layer at the crack tip in broadening the plastic deformation distribution, thus contributing to FCGR deceleration.

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Keyword: Ni-Co based superalloy, Elevated temperature, Oxidation, Short fatigue crack, Crack closure, Three-dimensional observation

Date published: 2023-09-02

Publisher: Elsevier BV

Journal:

  • MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING A-STRUCTURAL MATERIALS PROPERTIES MICROSTRUCTURE AND PROCESSING (ISSN: 09215093) vol. 885 p. 145655-145655

Funding:

  • (This research was supported by the Council for Science, Technology and Innovation (CSTI), the Cross-ministerial Strategic Innovation Promotion Program (SIP), “Materials Integration” for Revolutionary Design Systems for Structural Materials (Funding agency: JST).)

Manuscript type: Author's version (Accepted manuscript)

MDR DOI: https://doi.org/10.48505/nims.4287

First published URL: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.msea.2023.145655

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Updated at: 2025-10-03 08:30:16 +0900

Published on MDR: 2025-10-03 08:17:55 +0900

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