Nickel and Other Super Alloys: TSUF 06 Materiales Aeronauticos

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Nickel and other super alloys

TSUF 06 Materiales Aeronauticos

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Nickel

S The name nickel is from the German for Old Nicks (the

Devils) copper a derogatory term for the hard useless metal yielded by what was thought to be a copper-bearing ore
S These days nickel is an important alloy element, with much

wider application than copper

Unusual properties

S Nickel-iron with low expansion coefficient (Invar) S Nickel-chromium resistance heating elements S Shape memory alloys (Ni-Ti) S Alloys with soft magnetic properties S Superalloys for gas turbine engines and other high

temperature uses
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Nickel

S fcc metal, no solid phase changes. S Grey colour S 43% of production used in stainless steels S 20% in non-ferrous alloys S Alloy steels, foundry products S Other uses S Chemicals, catalysts, ceramics, coinage, magnets

Nickel alloys

S About 60 alloys S Some with less than 50% nickel (or any other alloy element) S Single phase alloys (fcc)
S

Nickel has a high solubility of Cu, Cr, Mo, Fe, etc

S Precipitation hardened alloys


S

With Al, Ti or Nb in above 0.5%

S Dispersion strengthened alloys


S

Produced by powder metallurgy

Alloy designations

S The alloy names are based upon proprietary names, usually from

Inco, Haynes, Krupp-VDM,


S eg Alloy 625 was originally Inconel 625

S UNS number is a 5-digit numbers preceded by N S eg Alloy 625 is UNS N06625 S ISO 9722 numbers are often (but not always) based upon the UNS

numbers
S eg UNS N06625 is ISO NW6625

S DIN designations are descriptive (NiCr22Mo9Nb)


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Properties

S Corrosion resistance to neutral, acid, basic, oxidising or

reducing environments
S Piping, vessels for chemicals, seawater, etc

S High temperature strength, corrosion and oxidation resistance S Up to 1200C S High cost S Nickel alloy weld overlays commonly used S Nickel alloys are excellent filler metals for dissimilar welds

Metallurgy of nickel alloys

S Alloys are mostly single phase fcc


S Nickel has a wide range of solubility for other metals S Alloys contain Cu, Cr, Mo, Fe,

S Age hardenable alloys contain aluminium, niobium and/or

titanium
S Dispersion-strengthened alloys contain 2% thoria (ThO2) and

are made by powder metallurgy.


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Commercially pure nickel

S Nickel 200
S Up to 0.15% C as impurity; graphitises at over 320C S Resists caustic soda & other alkalies

S Nickel 201: 0.02% C maximum S Duranickel 301: Ni-4.4Al-0.6Ti


S Age hardening gamma prime

Applications of pure nickel

S Caustic soda handling equipment

Food processing
S Laboratory crucibles

S Chemical shipping drums


S Electrical and electronics parts

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Nickel-copper (Monel metal)

S Probably the best corrosion resistance to a wide range of environments

of any alloy
S Monel 400: 70Ni-30Cu fcc alloy: Rm 480 to 1170 MPa
S

Cladding, vessels and piping for seawater, brackish water, chlorinated solvents, many acids and alkalies

S Monel 405: 0.04% S - free machining


S Monel K-500: 2.7% Al, 0.6% Ti: Rm 1100 to 1240 MPa
S

Age hardening - gamma prime phase

S Steam turbine blades, etc


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Nickel-chromium alloys

S Over 50% Ni with >15% Cr, Mo, Fe, C, W S Single phase fcc, solid solution strengthened
S Seamless transition to austenitic stainless steel

S Wide range of temperatures (cryogenic to 1000C)


S Acids, neutral and alkalies. Oxidising and reducing chemicals.

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Examples of Ni-Cr alloys

S Nichrome alloys
S 80Ni-30Cr, 60Ni-16Cr-24Fe S Electrical resistors & heating elements

S Inconel 600, 625, 671, 690


S Eg Inconel 625: 61Ni-21Cr-9Mo-3.6Nb

S Hastelloy C-4, C-276, G, G-3, N, S, W, X


S Eg Hastelloy C-276: 59Ni-15.5Cr-16Mo-3.75W-5.5Fe

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Nickel-iron-chromium alloys

S Cross between austenitic stainless steel and nickel alloys S Incoloy 800: 32.5Ni-21Cr-46Fe S RA333: 45Ni-25Cr-18Fe-3Mo-3Co-3W
S Excellent resistance to oxidation at high temperatures, S Good resistance to corrosion in acids and salts, but not halides

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Fabrication of Ni alloys

S Casting is difficult, but castings are produced S Forming (hot & cold) is similar, but somewhat more difficult than

austenitic stainless steels


S Weldability is excellent for many types (better than austenitic stainless

steel)
S Heating operations are generally performed in controlled atmospheres

to avoid intercrystalline embrittlement


S Avoid contamination with S, P, Pb, Zn, Sn
S

Solidification or liquation cracking

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Welding procedures

S GTAW, GMAW, MMAW, SAW, PAW, OFW, RW, EBW, S Use matching or over-alloyed fillers S Keep arc energy low
S

Segregation can result in loss of corrosion performance

S Preheat not required S Keep clean to avoid cracking S Remove slag to avoid corrosion attack at high temperatures

Super alloys (high temperature)

S
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Super alloys

S High temperature performance (strength) S Gas turbines, steam turbines, reciprocating engines S Hot working and casting tools and dies

S Aircraft & space vehicles


S Heat treatment trays, fixtures, conveyors S Nuclear and chemical industries
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Alloy types
S Selection depends on strength, creep & oxidation performance at the

elevated temperature
S Iron based alloys S Nickel based alloys

S Cobalt based alloys


S Refractory metals (niobium, molybdenum, tantalum, rhenium &

tungsten)
S Directionally solidified eutectics, single crystals, intermetallic

compounds
S Non-metals (graphite, ceramics)

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Fabrication

S Fabrication & machining of many super alloys is difficult S No hot or cold forming S Investment casting S Powder metallurgy S Electrochemical, electrodischarge or ultrasonic machining

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Metallurgy of Fe, Ni & Co super alloys

S Solid solution strengthened S Precipitation hardened S Oxide-dispersion strengthened

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Cobalt-based alloys

S Resistant to specific environments, eg engine combustion

gases at high temperature


S High strength
S Ry up to 790 MPa & Rm up to 1170 MPa at room temperature
S 1000 hour rupture strength at 815C up to 230 MPa

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Typical cobalt-base alloys

S 650C to 1150C S Haynes 25, 188 S Fasteners at 650C S UMCo-50, S-816

S Wear alloys S Stellite 6B


S fcc with some tendency to transform to cph S Carbides and intermetallic compounds
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Nickel-based super alloys

S Ni alloys have a better resistance to high temperatures and

have a higher strength than stainless steels or cobalt alloys


S Ry up to 1200 MPa & Rm up to 1450 MPa at room temp S 1000 hour rupture strength at 850C up to 450 MPa

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Solid solution alloys

S Inconels, Hastelloys, RA-333 used for furnace parts S Nimonic 75 for gas turbines

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Precipitation hardened alloys

S Aluminium and titanium, gamma prime or gamma double

prime precipitates
S Inconel X-750, Nimonic 80,

S Aerospace applications
S Gas turbine blades

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Welding the PH Ni alloys

S GTAW process only


S To avoid burn-out of strengthening alloys in fillers

S Cracking can be experienced


S Anneal base material before welding
S Stress relieve and age weldments S This also ensures welds have highest strength

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References

S Nickel development institute (NiDI) provides much free

literature on nickel alloys and stainless steel


S Nidi.org

S Haynesintl.com
S ASM Handbook Vol 3

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