Shearing Mechanisms of Co-Precipitates in IN718
Christopher H. Zenk, Longsheng Feng, Donald McAllister, Yunzhi Wang,, Michael J. Mills

TL;DR
This study combines atomic-scale imaging and phase-field modeling to elucidate the complex shearing mechanisms of co-precipitates in Ni-based superalloy IN718, revealing phase-dependent deformation pathways and dislocation interactions at low temperatures.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the atomic-scale deformation mechanisms of ${ m extgamma}''$ and ${ m extgamma}'/{ m extgamma}''$ co-precipitates, integrating experimental observations with advanced modeling.
Findings
Intrinsic stacking faults observed in ${ m extgamma}''$ phase.
${ m extgamma}'$ exhibits anti-phase boundaries or superlattice stacking faults.
Multiple dislocation mechanisms active at low temperature.
Abstract
The Ni-base superalloy 718 is the most widely used material for turbomachinery in the aerospace industry and land-based turbines. Although the relationship between processing and the resulting properties is well known, an understanding of the specific deformation mechanisms activated across its application temperature range is required to create more mechanistically accurate property models. Direct atomic-scale imaging observations with high angle annular dark-field scanning transmission electron microscopy, complemented by phase-field modeling informed by generalized stacking fault surface calculations using density functional theory, were employed to understand the shear process of and co-precipitates after 1 \% macroscopic strain at lower temperature (ambient and ). Experimentally, intrinsic stacking faults were observed in the…
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