학술논문

Atom Probe Tomography Investigation of Nanoscale Ordered Precipitates in an Experimental Steel
Document Type
Conference
Source
2006 19th International Vacuum Nanoelectronics Conference Vacuum Nanoelectronics Conference, 2006 and the 2006 50th International Field Emission Symposium., IVNC/IFES 2006. Technical Digest. 19th International. :119-119 Jul, 2006
Subject
Components, Circuits, Devices and Systems
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Probes
Tomography
Steel
Intermetallic
Aluminum alloys
Iron alloys
Nickel alloys
Heating
Temperature
Monitoring
Language
ISSN
2164-2370
2380-6311
Abstract
Summary form only given. The precipitation phenomena in a secondary hardening experimental steel alloyed with Ni and Al have been investigated by atom probe tomography (APT). The overall precipitation behavior during tempering has been sequenced as follows: a constant heating rate of 20degC/min was applied to small rods, and they were subsequently quenched from the desired temperature in order to monitor the development of the microstructure, which consists of a fine dispersion of secondary hardening complex carbides (Mo, Cr, V carbides) and intermetallic B2 (CsCl) ordered NiAl particles. The early stages of precipitation of ordered precipitates was investigated by following the behavior of homo- and hetero-atomic Ni, Al pairs by plotting the pair correlation function as derived from the 3D data-sets. For longer aging times, it appears that complex carbides precipitate together with an intermetallic NiAl phase. However, the composition of both phases was found to vary during tempering; specifically, a significant amount of iron is still present in the core of the ordered phase even in the overaged conditions. Additionally, ordering in NiAl intermetallic precipitates was monitored by probing along a superstructure [200] direction. A large displacement shift of the Ni sublattice with respect to the Al-sublattice in the direction perpendicular to the analysis was observed. This effect has been simulated and can be related to trajectory aberrations during the evaporation sequence