STEM and APT characterization of scale formation on a La,Hf,Ti-doped NiCrAl model alloy

Kinga A. Unocic, Yimeng Chen, Dongwon Shin, Bruce A. Pint, Emmanuelle A. Marquis

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Abstract

A thermally grown scale formed on a cast NiCrAl model alloy doped with lanthanum, hafnium, and titanium was examined after isothermal exposure at 1100 °C for 100 h in dry flowing O2 to understand the dopant segregation along scale grain boundaries. The complex scale formed on the alloy surface was composed of two types of substrates: phase-dependent, thin (<250 nm) outer layers and a columnar-grained ∼3.5 μm inner alumina layer. Two types of oxides formed between the inner and outer scale layers: small (3–15 nm) La2O3 and larger (≤50 nm) HfO2 oxide precipitates. Nonuniform distributions of the hafnium, lanthanum, and titanium dopants were observed along the inner scale grain boundaries, with hafnium dominating in most of the grain boundaries of α-Al2O3. The concentration of reactive elements (RE) seemed to strongly depend on the grain boundary structure. The level of titanium grain boundary segregation in the inner scale decreased toward the model alloy (substrate), confirming the fast outward diffusion of titanium. Hafnium was also observed at the metal–scale interface and in the γ′ (Ni3Al) phase of the alloy. High-resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy (STEM) confirmed the substitution of REs for aluminum atoms at the scale grain boundaries, consistent with both the semiconducting band structure and the site-blocking models. Both STEM and atom probe tomography allowed quantification of REs along the scale grain boundaries across the scale thickness. Analysis of the scale morphology after isothermal exposure in flowing oxygen revealed a myriad of new precipitate phases, RE segregation dependence on grain boundary type, and atomic arrangement along scale grain boundaries, which is expected to influence the scale growth rate, stability, and mechanical properties.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)41-52
Number of pages12
JournalMicron
Volume109
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2018

Funding

This research was supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Coal and Power R&D, Office of Fossil Energy, and by the Center for Nanophase Materials Sciences , which is a US Department of Energy Office of Science Scientific User Facility. Y. Chen and E.A. Marquis acknowledge financial support from the University of Michigan College of Engineering . The authors would like to thank G. W. Garner, T. M. Lowe, and D.W. Coffey for assistance with the experimental work. We thank K.L. More, D.T. Hoelzer, J.D. Poplawsky, and L.F. Allard for their comments and suggestions.

Keywords

  • Atom probe tomography
  • Grain boundary segregation
  • High-temperature alloys
  • NiCrAl
  • Oxidation
  • Scanning transmission electron microscopy
  • Substitution by the reactive elements
  • α-AlO

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