Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel
The highly flexible operation schemes of future thermal energy conversion systems (concentrating solar power, heat storage and backup plants, power-2-X technologies) necessitate increased damage tolerance and durability of the applied structural materials under cyclic loading. Resistance to fatigue,...
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doaj-0f26e0dc98924696b260c5241a88544e2020-11-25T03:47:23ZengMDPI AGApplied Sciences2076-34172020-09-01106338633810.3390/app10186338Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr SteelBernd Kuhn0Jennifer Lopez Barrilao1Torsten Fischer2Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH, Institute of Energy and Climate Research (IEK), Microstructure and Properties of Materials (IEK-2), 52425 Jülich, GermanyForschungszentrum Juelich GmbH, Institute of Energy and Climate Research (IEK), Microstructure and Properties of Materials (IEK-2), 52425 Jülich, GermanyForschungszentrum Juelich GmbH, Institute of Energy and Climate Research (IEK), Microstructure and Properties of Materials (IEK-2), 52425 Jülich, GermanyThe highly flexible operation schemes of future thermal energy conversion systems (concentrating solar power, heat storage and backup plants, power-2-X technologies) necessitate increased damage tolerance and durability of the applied structural materials under cyclic loading. Resistance to fatigue, especially thermomechanical fatigue and the associated implications for material selection, lifetime and its assessment, are issues not considered adequately by the power engineering materials community yet. This paper investigates the principal microstructural evolution, damage and failure of two steels in thermomechanical fatigue loading: Ferritic-martensitic grade 91 steel, a state of the art 9 wt % Cr power engineering grade and the 22 wt % Cr, ferritic, stainless Crofer<sup>®</sup> 22 H (trade name of VDM Metals GmbH, Germany; under license of Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH) steel. While the ferritic-martensitic grade 91 steel suffers pronounced microstructural instability, the ferritic Crofer<sup>®</sup> 22 H provides superior microstructural stability and offers increased fatigue lifetime and more forgiving failure characteristics, because of innovative stabilization by (thermomechanically triggered) precipitation of fine Laves phase particles. The potential for further development of this mechanism of strengthening against fatigue is addressed.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/18/6338thermomechanical fatiguemicrostructural (in) stabilityLaves phasecyclic softening/strengtheningthermomechanically triggered precipitation |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Bernd Kuhn Jennifer Lopez Barrilao Torsten Fischer |
spellingShingle |
Bernd Kuhn Jennifer Lopez Barrilao Torsten Fischer Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel Applied Sciences thermomechanical fatigue microstructural (in) stability Laves phase cyclic softening/strengthening thermomechanically triggered precipitation |
author_facet |
Bernd Kuhn Jennifer Lopez Barrilao Torsten Fischer |
author_sort |
Bernd Kuhn |
title |
Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel |
title_short |
Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel |
title_full |
Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel |
title_fullStr |
Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel |
title_full_unstemmed |
Impact of Thermomechanical Fatigue on Microstructure Evolution of a Ferritic-Martensitic 9 Cr and a Ferritic, Stainless 22 Cr Steel |
title_sort |
impact of thermomechanical fatigue on microstructure evolution of a ferritic-martensitic 9 cr and a ferritic, stainless 22 cr steel |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Applied Sciences |
issn |
2076-3417 |
publishDate |
2020-09-01 |
description |
The highly flexible operation schemes of future thermal energy conversion systems (concentrating solar power, heat storage and backup plants, power-2-X technologies) necessitate increased damage tolerance and durability of the applied structural materials under cyclic loading. Resistance to fatigue, especially thermomechanical fatigue and the associated implications for material selection, lifetime and its assessment, are issues not considered adequately by the power engineering materials community yet. This paper investigates the principal microstructural evolution, damage and failure of two steels in thermomechanical fatigue loading: Ferritic-martensitic grade 91 steel, a state of the art 9 wt % Cr power engineering grade and the 22 wt % Cr, ferritic, stainless Crofer<sup>®</sup> 22 H (trade name of VDM Metals GmbH, Germany; under license of Forschungszentrum Juelich GmbH) steel. While the ferritic-martensitic grade 91 steel suffers pronounced microstructural instability, the ferritic Crofer<sup>®</sup> 22 H provides superior microstructural stability and offers increased fatigue lifetime and more forgiving failure characteristics, because of innovative stabilization by (thermomechanically triggered) precipitation of fine Laves phase particles. The potential for further development of this mechanism of strengthening against fatigue is addressed. |
topic |
thermomechanical fatigue microstructural (in) stability Laves phase cyclic softening/strengthening thermomechanically triggered precipitation |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3417/10/18/6338 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT berndkuhn impactofthermomechanicalfatigueonmicrostructureevolutionofaferriticmartensitic9crandaferriticstainless22crsteel AT jenniferlopezbarrilao impactofthermomechanicalfatigueonmicrostructureevolutionofaferriticmartensitic9crandaferriticstainless22crsteel AT torstenfischer impactofthermomechanicalfatigueonmicrostructureevolutionofaferriticmartensitic9crandaferriticstainless22crsteel |
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