Abstract/Details

Characterization and Evaluation of Aged Chromium Nickel Niobium Stainless Steels

Dewar, Matthew.   University of Alberta (Canada) ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  2013. MR92458.

Abstract (summary)

20Cr-32Ni-1Nb stainless steel alloys are commonly used in hydrogen reformer manifolds for transporting hot hydrogen by-products at 750-950°C. After long periods of exposure, embrittling secondary carbides and intermetallic phases can precipitate at the grain boundaries which can drastically reduce the ductility, and the repair weldability of the alloy. The intermetallic silicide, G-phase, is commonly observed in 20Cr-32Ni-1Nb stainless steels, and is prone to liquation cracking during welding operations. G-phase is deleterious to the material, where a high degree of G-phase coarsening will render the material unweldable.

The present work will investigate various methods in mitigating G-phase precipitation. Variations in casting methods, wall thickness, homogenization treatments, and alloy chemistry will be examined by evaluating their microstructure after periodically aging the samples. Thermodynamic equilibrium modeling using computational thermodynamic tools will be used to optimize the 20Cr-32Ni-1Nb chemistry following ASTM specifications.

Indexing (details)


Subject
Materials science
Classification
0794: Materials science
Identifier / keyword
Applied sciences
Title
Characterization and Evaluation of Aged Chromium Nickel Niobium Stainless Steels
Author
Dewar, Matthew
Number of pages
236
Degree date
2013
School code
0351
Source
MAI 51/05M(E), Masters Abstracts International
ISBN
978-0-494-92458-7
Advisor
Mendez, Patricio F.
University/institution
University of Alberta (Canada)
University location
Canada -- Alberta, CA
Degree
M.Sc.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
MR92458
ProQuest document ID
1316620089
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1316620089