Return to search

Combinatorial Assessment of the Influence of Composition and Exposure Time on the Oxidation Behavior and Concurrent Oxygen-induced Phase Transformations of Binary Ti-x Systems

The relatively low oxidation resistance and subsequent surface embrittlement have often limited the use of titanium alloys in elevated temperature structural applications. Although extensive effort is spent to investigate the high temperature oxidation performance of titanium alloys, the studies are often constrained to complex technical titanium alloys and neither the mechanisms associated with evolution of the oxide scale nor the effect of oxygen ingress on the microstructure of the base metal are well-understood. In addition lack of systematic oxidation studies across a wider domain of the alloy composition has complicated the determination of composition-mechanism-property relationships. Clearly, it would be ideal to assess the influence of composition and exposure time on the oxidation resistance, independent of experimental variabilities regarding time, temperature and atmosphere as the potential source of error. Such studies might also provide a series of metrics (e.g., hardness, scale, etc) that could be interpreted together and related to the alloy composition. In this thesis a novel combinatorial approach was adopted whereby a series of compositionally graded specimens, (Ti-xMo, Ti-xCr, Ti-xAl and Ti-xW) were prepared using Laser Engineered Net Shaping (LENS™) technology and exposed to still-air at 650 °C. A suite of the state-of-the-art characterization techniques were employed to assess several aspects of the oxidation reaction as a function of local average composition including: the operating oxidation mechanisms; the structure and composition of the oxides; the oxide adherence and porosity; the thickness of the oxide layers; the depth of oxygen ingress; and microstructural evolution of the base material just below the surface but within the oxygen-enriched region. The results showed that for the Ti-Mo, Ti-Al and Ti-W systems a parabolic oxidation rate law is obeyed in the studied composition-time domain while Ti-Cr system experiences a rapid breakaway oxidation regime at low solute concentrations. The only titanium oxide phase present in the scale for all the binary systems was identified as rutile (TiO2) and formation of multiphase oxide scales TiO2+Al2O3 in Ti-Al system and TiO2+TiCr2 in Ti-Cr system was observed. A thermodynamic framework has been used to rationalize the oxygen-induced subsurface microstructural transformations including: homogeneous precipitation of nano-scaled β particles and discontinuous precipitation of +β phases in Ti-Mo and Ti-W system, evolution of TiCr2 intermetallic phase in Ti-Cr system and ordering phase transformation in Ti-Al system.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:unt.edu/info:ark/67531/metadc801898
Date05 1900
CreatorsSamimi, Peyman
ContributorsCollins, Peter (Peter C.), Banerjee, Rajarshi, Scharf, Thomas W., Mishra, Rajiv S., Young, Marcus L.
PublisherUniversity of North Texas
Source SetsUniversity of North Texas
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis or Dissertation
Formatxvi, 240 pages : illustrations (some color), Text
RightsPublic, Samimi, Peyman, Copyright, Copyright is held by the author, unless otherwise noted. All rights Reserved.

Page generated in 0.0021 seconds