Cavitation Resistance, Microstructure, and Surface Topography of Plasma Nitrided Nimonic 80 A Alloy
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- the formation of a wear-resistant thin layer, with high hardness (HV = 700–1200 daN/mm2);
- the generation of a surface layer with good adhesion to the substrate;
- an increase of long-term fatigue resistance, due to the compression stresses developed in the surface layer;
- improved surface properties to cavitation erosion and corrosion in atmospheric air, water, vapours, etc.;
- higher resistance to soaking up to temperatures of between 500 and 550 °C.
2. Experimental Procedure
3. Results and Discussions
3.1. Cavitation Curves
- in the first 30 min of cavitation, the surface is less affected and withstands the stress induced by the shocks generated by the impact with the cavitation micro-jets. The losses are limited and reflect only the destruction of the roughness left after the technological polishing process at Ra = 0.4 µm. Basically, in this interval, the force of the shocks extends the networks of microcracks associated with the phenomenon of fatigue due to cyclic contractions that manifest during the cavitational cycle. After this period, the sample surface subjected to solution treatment starts to intensely degrade (Figure 4a), while in the nitrided samples, an erosion ring is generated (Figure 4b). The ring is characterised by small craters and caverns of pitting-like shape. It becomes wider and wider and extends to the centre of the specimen. Another aspect observed is the lack of caverns arranged stellar configuration towards the periphery, as can be seen for the samples in the solution treatment state (Figure 4b compared to Figure 4a);
- by using the nitriding thermochemical treatment, the surface resistance to the erosion generated by the microjets developed through the vibrating cavitation increases substantially. Thus, the mean depth of erosion, MDE, (Figure 2), after 165 min of exposure to cavitation and the final constant value (also at 165 min), at which the mean penetration of erosion rate tends to stabilize, MDER, (Figure 3) decrease approximately ten times and six times, respectively;
- the high cavitation resistance of the nitrided layer is confirmed by both the reduced and uniform dispersion of the experimental points towards the mediation curves (very expressive in Figure 3), as well as by the linearization of the MDE(t) curve and the stabilisation of the MDER(t) rate at the maximum value starting with the 60th min. In solution heat-treated samples, this phenomenon starts after 90 min of cavitation.
3.2. Roughness of Cavitation Tested Surfaces
3.3. Micrographic and X-ray Diffraction Analysis
- a chemical combinations zone having a light and extremely thin colour, of approximately 3–5 μm; surface hardness had values from 790–820 HV5, more than three times higher than the base material (176–188 HV5);
- a diffusion area of approximately 30–40 μm, consisting of carbonitride particles of the alloying elements (having the size from ≈ 8–10 µm), which are embedded into the solid solution matrix γ.
3.4. Topography of Cavitation Eroded Surfaces
4. Conclusions
- the plasma nitriding thermochemical treatment at 530 °C favours an approximately six times reduction in the cavitation erosion rate, respectively, an increase in the cavitation resistance by over 500%, compared to the structural state obtained by solution treatment, 1080 °C/air;
- the microstructure of the nitrided layer consists of an extremely thin area of chemical combinations and a diffusion zone in which the carbonitrides of the alloying elements incorporated in a matrix of solid solution γ with nickel base are present;
- typical topographies of cavitation-eroded surfaces show a preferential degradation of the grain boundaries between the γ solid solution phases, of the twins’ boundary, and of the interface between the precipitated particles and the γ solid solution matrix. In the nitrided samples, the initiation of the cracks is determined by nitride particles, which are hard and brittle;
- due to the high mechanical strength characteristics of the solid solution γ with the fcc crystal lattice, the appearance of the cavitation surface is uniform, and the fracture has a ductile character.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Chromium | 20.5 |
Titanium | 1.98 |
Aluminum | 1.54 |
Iron | 2.14 |
Cobalt | 1.61 |
Manganese | 0.63 |
Silicon | 0.45 |
Copper | 0.12 |
Carbon | 0.08 |
Sulfur | 0.014 |
Zirconium | 0.11 |
Nickel | Balance |
Cumulative Mean Depth of Erosion | Erosion Rate |
---|---|
MDEi == [mm] | MDERi = ΔMDEi/Δti |
I—represents the test period. Δmi—is the mass of material lost by erosion, in period i, in grams. ρ—alloy density, in grams/mm3. Δti—cavitation time corresponding to the period “i” (5 min, 10 min, or 15 min). dp—diameter of the sample surface, subjected to cavity attack (dp = 15.8 mm). ΔMDEi—the value of the mean erosion penetration depth, achieved by cavitation during the Δti period. |
Mean Penetration Depth of Erosion | Mean Depth of Erosion Rate |
---|---|
MDE(t) = A⋅t⋅(1 − e−B⋅t) | MDER(t) = A⋅(1−e−B⋅t) + A⋅B⋅t⋅e−B⋅t |
where: A—is the scale parameter, statistically established for the construction of the approximation/mediation curve, provided that the deviations of the experimental points from it are minimal. B—is the shape parameter of the curve. |
Structural Condition | MDE(165 min.) [µm] | Ra [µm] | Rz [µm] | Rt [µm] |
---|---|---|---|---|
Solution treatment | 32 | 5.539 | 31.598 | 48.026 |
Solution treatment + nitriding | 3.27 | 0.465 | 3.172 | 4.663 |
Structural Condition | Cavitation Erosion Resistance Parameter | Variation Compared with Solution Heat-Treated Sample | |
---|---|---|---|
MDERs [µm/min] | Rcav [min/µm] | ||
Solution treatment | 0.24 | 4.16 | - |
Solution treatment + nitriding | 0.038 | 26.32 | Increases by 532 % (6.32 times) |
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Mitelea, I.; Bordeaşu, I.; Belin, C.; Uţu, I.-D.; Crăciunescu, C.M. Cavitation Resistance, Microstructure, and Surface Topography of Plasma Nitrided Nimonic 80 A Alloy. Materials 2022, 15, 6654. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15196654
Mitelea I, Bordeaşu I, Belin C, Uţu I-D, Crăciunescu CM. Cavitation Resistance, Microstructure, and Surface Topography of Plasma Nitrided Nimonic 80 A Alloy. Materials. 2022; 15(19):6654. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15196654
Chicago/Turabian StyleMitelea, Ion, Ilare Bordeaşu, Cosmin Belin, Ion-Dragoş Uţu, and Corneliu Marius Crăciunescu. 2022. "Cavitation Resistance, Microstructure, and Surface Topography of Plasma Nitrided Nimonic 80 A Alloy" Materials 15, no. 19: 6654. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15196654
APA StyleMitelea, I., Bordeaşu, I., Belin, C., Uţu, I.-D., & Crăciunescu, C. M. (2022). Cavitation Resistance, Microstructure, and Surface Topography of Plasma Nitrided Nimonic 80 A Alloy. Materials, 15(19), 6654. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma15196654