On the role of boron, carbon and zirconium on hot cracking and creep resistance of additively manufactured polycrystalline superalloys
Arthur Despr\'es, Stoichko Antonov, Charlotte Mayer, Catherine Tassin,, Jean-Jacques Blandin, Paraskevas Kontis, Guilhem Martin

TL;DR
This study examines how boron, carbon, and zirconium influence hot cracking and creep resistance in additively manufactured nickel-based superalloys, providing microstructural insights and alloy design guidelines.
Contribution
It reveals the effects of boron, carbon, and zirconium distribution on cracking and creep, and proposes design strategies to optimize alloy performance.
Findings
Alloys with boron and carbon but no zirconium are crack-free and creep resistant.
Zirconium segregates at gamma' precipitates after heat treatment, not at grain boundaries.
Presence of zirconium at grain boundaries increases hot cracking susceptibility.
Abstract
We investigate the hot cracking susceptibility and creep resistance of three versions of a nickel-based superalloy with different contents of boron, carbon and zirconium fabricated by laser powder bed fusion. Crack-free and creep resistant components are achieved for alloys with boron, carbon and no zirconium. We then rationalize this result by evaluating how boron, carbon and zirconium are distributed at grain boundaries in the as-built and heat-treated microstructures of an alloy containing all these elements. Observations are conducted by scanning and transmission electron microscopy, and atom probe tomography. In the as-built microstructure, boron, carbon and zirconium segregate at high-angle grain boundaries as a result of solute partitioning to the liquid and limited solid-state diffusion during solidification and cooling. After heat-treatment, the amount of boron and carbon…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdditive Manufacturing Materials and Processes · High Temperature Alloys and Creep · Nuclear Materials and Properties
