Multi-Dimensional Revealing the Influence Mechanism of the δ Phase on the Tensile Fracture Behavior of a Nickel-Based Superalloy on the Mesoscopic Scale

Materials (Basel). 2022 Jan 14;15(2):610. doi: 10.3390/ma15020610.

Abstract

As the key materials of aircraft engines, nickel-based superalloys have excellent comprehensive properties. Mircotensile experiments were carried out based on in situ digital image correlation (DIC) and in situ synchrotron radiation (SR) technique. The effects of the δ phase on the grain orientation, surface roughening, and strain localization were investigated. The results showed that the average kernel average misorientation (KAM) value of the fractured specimens increased significantly compared with that of the heat-treated specimens. The surface roughness decreased with an increasing volume fraction of the δ phase. The strain localization of specimens increased with the increasing ageing time. The size and volume fraction of voids gradually increased with the increase in plastic strain. Some small voids expanded into large voids with a complex morphology during micro-tensile deformation. The needle-like δ phase near the fracture broke into short rods, while the minor spherical δ phase did not break. The rod-like and needle-like δ phases provided channels for the propagation of the microcrack, and the accumulation of the microcrack eventually led to the fracture of specimens.

Keywords: fracture mechanism; nickel-based superalloy; strain evolution; δ phase.