An Evaluation of the Mechanical Behavior of some new High Temperature Materials
Abstract
Two new high-temperature alloy systems have been discovered recently at the Indian
Institute of Science, which form the basis of this thesis. The first alloy system is an
Intermetallic-Intermetallic eutectic composite alloy in the nickel-rich end of the Ni-Al-
Zr ternary system, first reported by Tiwary et al. These eutectic composites have very
impressive room temperature yield strengths of about 2 GPa which are retained till
about 700 . Coupled with 2 to 5% tensile plasticity at room temperature, excellent
high-temperature oxidation resistance, good long-term microstructural stability and very
low densities of about 7.35–7.95 gm/cm3, these materials are exciting candidates for
high-temperature applications.
The second alloy system comprises of Tungsten free Cobalt based superalloys having
the classical
−
0 microstructure similar to that of nickel-based superalloys as described
by Makineni et al. The presence of the L12 phase in cobalt-based systems was reported
by Lee et al. and Sato et al. where the addition of 25 wt.% tungsten seemed to stabilize
the metastable Co3Al. This however pushed the density of the alloy to about 9–10
gm/cm3, making it too heavy for most high-temperature applications. A large body of
work followed trying to reduce or eliminate the presence of tungsten in these alloys. The
new alloys by Makineni et al. do not contain tungsten which reduces the density to about
8.0–8.4 gm/cm3.
The high-temperature mechanical behavior of some of the alloys from these two sysi
tems has been evaluated in the current thesis. This thesis is divided into six chapters.