The present application claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of Austrian Patent Application No. A 802/2010, filed on May 12, 2010, the entire disclosure of which is expressly incorporated by reference herein.
1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates to a method for producing a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy. Furthermore, the invention relates to a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy, produced with near net shape dimensions.
2. Discussion of Background Information
Titanium-aluminum base alloys in general have a high strength, a low density and good corrosion resistance and are preferably used as components in gas turbines and aircraft engines.
For the above fields of application, in particular alloys with a composition of: aluminum 40 atomic % to 50 atomic %, niobium 3 atomic % to 10 atomic %, molybdenum up to 4 atomic % as well as optionally the elements manganese, boron, silicon, carbon, oxygen and nitrogen in low concentrations as well as titanium as a remainder are of interest.
These alloys preferably solidify completely via the β mixed crystal and pass through a number of phase transformations during a subsequent cooling. A schematic diagram (
The components can be produced by casting a block or by means of powder metallurgy through hot isostatic pressing (HIPing) of alloyed metal powder as well as by casting a block and optionally HIPing of the same with subsequent extrusion molding and respectively with a subsequent forging of the block or intermediate product to form a component, which is subsequently subjected to heat treatments.
Titanium-aluminum materials have only a narrow temperature window for a hot forming, although it can be expanded by the alloying elements niobium and molybdenum, but nevertheless limitations result regarding the deformation or forging of the parts. It is known to produce a component at least in part by non-cutting shaping, by means of slow isothermal deformation, known to one skilled in the art as isothermal forging, but this is associated with high expenditure.
At best, a component produced according to the above technologies will not usually have a homogeneous fine structure because, on the one hand, there is a low and unequal recrystallization potential of the slowly isothermally deformed material, and/or, on the other hand, the diffusion of the atoms of the elements niobium and/or molybdenum requiring a large time expenditure, which are important for a deformability of a material, are aligned according to the forming structure and can thus have a disadvantageous effect on the structure.
Although a homogenization of the microstructure formation and thus the achievement of isotropic mechanical properties of the material through time-consuming annealing treatments is possible on principle, it requires a high expenditure.
For industrial practice, components of a titanium-aluminum base alloy are necessary which have homogeneous mechanical properties independent of direction, wherein the ductility, strength and creep resistance of the material are present in a balanced manner at a high level even at high application temperatures.
It would be advantageous to have available a method with which a component can be produced with homogeneous, fine and uniform microstructure, which component has a balanced ductility, strength and creep resistance of the material in all directions essentially equally at a desired high level and can be produced economically with near net shape dimensions.
It would further be desirable to have available a component which with a targeted phase formation of the microstructure has desired mechanical properties, in particular a yield strength Rp0.2 and a strength Rm as well as total elongation At in the tensile strength test at room temperature and at a temperature of 700° C.
The present invention provides a method for producing a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy. The method comprises
(a) after a through heating for at least about 60 minutes, isostatically pressing, with an increase in pressure to at least about 150 MPa at a temperature of at least about 1000° C., an alloy produced by melting metallurgy or powder metallurgy and having a chemical composition of, in atomic %:
Aluminum (Al) from about 41 to about 48
and, optionally, one or more of:
Niobium (Nb) from about 4 to about 9
Molybdenum (Mo) from about 0.1 to about 3.0
Manganese (Mn) up to about 2.4
Boron (B) up to about 1.0
Silicon (Si) up to about 1.0
Carbon (C) up to about 1.0
Oxygen (O) up to about 0.5
Nitrogen (N) up to about 0.5
remainder titanium and impurities,
to form a blank,
(b) subjecting the blank of (a) to a hot forming by a rapid solid-blank deformation at a rate of greater than about 0.4 mm/sec and a deformation by compression measured as local expansion φ of greater than about 0.3, φ being defined as:
φ=In(hf/ho)
In on aspect of the method, in (b) the blank may be subjected to forging at a temperature of from about 1000° C. to about 1350° C. as the different forming method with the same minimum deformation as the hot forming by a rapid solid-blank deformation.
In another aspect of the method, the range of the eutectoid temperature (Teu) of the alloy may be from about 1010° C. to about 1180° C.
In yet another aspect, in (d) a post-annealing and/or a stabilizing annealing may be carried out.
In a still further aspect of the method of the present invention, the alloy may have a chemical composition of, in atomic %:
In another aspect of the method of the present invention, for an adjustment of desired material properties the component may be subjected in (c) to a heat treatment that takes place in the range of the eutectoid temperature (Teu) of the alloy, e.g., from about 1040° C. to about 1170° C., followed by cooling in air for from about 30 min to about 600 min, to form from the deformation microstructure a homogeneous, fine globular microstructure composed of phases GAMMA, BETA0, ALPHA2 (γ, β0, α2) having an ordered atomic structure at room temperature:
In another aspect of the method, for adjusting optimized high-temperature material properties the component may be subjected in (d) to at least one post-annealing that is carried out close to the alpha-transus temperature (Tα) of the alloy in the triple phase space (alpha, beta, gamma) for from at least about 30 min to no more than about 6000 min, followed by cooling the component for less than about 10 min to a temperature of about 700° C. and further cooling, preferably in air, to result in a phase formation:
In another aspect of the method, for adjusting optimized high-temperature material properties the component may be subjected in (d) to at least one post-annealing that is carried out close to the alpha-transus temperature (Tα) of the alloy in the triple phase space (alpha, beta, gamma) for from at least about 30 min to no more than about 6000 min, followed by cooling the component for less than about 10 min to a temperature of about 700° C. and further cooling, preferably in air, to result in a phase formation:
In another aspect of the method, after the at least one post-annealing set forth above the component may be subjected to at least one stabilizing annealing at a temperature of from about 700° C. to about 1000° C., at best above the application temperature of the component, for from about 60 min to about 1000 min, followed by a slow cooling or furnace cooling at a rate of less than about 5° C./min, e.g., less than about 1° C./min to adjust or develop the microstructural constituents:
In yet another aspect of the method, after the at least one post-annealing set forth above the component may be subjected to at least one stabilizing annealing at a temperature of from about 700° C. to about 1000° C., at best above the application temperature of the component, for from about 60 min to about 1000 min, followed by a slow cooling or furnace cooling at a rate of less than about 5° C./min, e.g., less than about 1° C./min, to adjust or develop the microstructural constituents:
The present invention also provides a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy with a chemical composition as set forth above, produced with near net shape dimensions, preferably with a method as set forth above, wherein the microstructure of the component is composed of phases GAMMA, BETA0, ALPHA2 (γ, (β0, α2) having an ordered atomic structure at room temperature:
The present invention also provides a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy with a chemical composition as set forth above, produced with near net shape dimensions, wherein the microstructure of the component is composed of the following phases:
The present invention also provides a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy with a chemical composition as set forth above, produced with near net shape dimensions, wherein the component has a microstructure composed of the following phases:
The present invention is further described in the detailed description which follows, in reference to the drawings by way of non-limiting examples of exemplary embodiments of the present invention, and wherein:
The particulars shown herein are by way of example and for purposes of illustrative discussion of the embodiments of the present invention only and are presented in the cause of providing what is believed to be the most useful and readily understood description of the principles and conceptual aspects of the present invention. In this regard, no attempt is made to show structural details of the present invention in more detail than is necessary for the fundamental understanding of the present invention, the description taken with the drawings making apparent to those skilled in the art how the several forms of the present invention may be embodied in practice.
According to the present invention in a method of the type mentioned at the outset, in a first step a starting material (alloy) is produced by means of melting metallurgy or powder metallurgy with a chemical composition of, in atomic %:
Aluminum (Al) from about 41 to about 48,
and, optionally, one or more of:
Niobium (Nb) from about 4 to about 9
Molybdenum (Mo) from about 0.1 to about 3.0
Manganese (Mn) up to about 2.4
Boron (B) up to about 1.0
Silicon (Si) up to about 1.0
Carbon (C) up to about 1.0
Oxygen (O) up to about 0.5
Nitrogen (N) up to about 0.5,
remainder titanium and impurities,
and this starting material, with an increase in pressure to at least about 150 MPa at a temperature of at least about 1000° C., after a through heating for a duration of at least about 60 minutes, is pressed isostatically to form a blank, after which in a second step the HIP blank is subjected to a hot forming by a rapid solid-blank deformation at a speed of greater than about 0.4 mm/sec and a deformation by compression measured as local elongation φ of greater than about 0.3, wherein φ is defined as follows:
φ=In(hf/ho)
A multiplicity of technical and economic advantages are achieved with the method according to the invention.
In the first step of the method, a starting material produced by means of melting metallurgy or powder metallurgy requires merely a compacting by hot isostatic pressing of the same, after which in a second step at a temperature that is higher compared to an isothermal forging and, as was discovered, with an advantageously improved hot working capacity of the material, the blank is subjected to a rapid solid blank deformation at a rate of more than about 0.4 mm/sec and a compression degree φ of greater than about 0.3. This rapid solid-blank deformation of the blank can be carried out at increased temperature at high deformation rate, which is surprising to one skilled in the art, wherein according to the invention a high minimum deformation and a subsequent cooling at a high cooling rate are necessary for a formation of a high, initially frozen, recrystallization potential in the microstructure.
This recrystallization potential or this stored energy resulting from the rapid deformation, which is also formed from the driving force from the chemical phase imbalance, in a third step with an annealing of the material in the range of the eutectoid temperature of the alloy causes a conversion into an extremely fine globular microstructure of the phases GAMMA, BETA0, ALPHA2 with ordered atomic structure at room temperature with specific phase proportions, which fine structure serves as a favorable fine grain starting structure for a subsequent microstructure formation, achievable by heat treatment(s), provided with respect to desired properties of the material.
According to the invention, it may be advantageous if the starting material has a chemical composition in atomic % of:
Al from about 42 to about 44.5,
and, optionally, one or more of:
Nb from about 3.5 to about 4.5
Mo from about 0.5 to about 1.5
Mn up to about 2.2
B from about 0.05 to about 0.2
Si from about 0.001 to about 0.01
C from about 0.001 to about 1.0
from about 0.001 to about 0.1
N from about 0.0001 to about 0.02,
remainder titanium and impurities.
A chemical composition of the material of this type, which is narrower in the concentrations of the elements, can intensify a favorable behavior achieved by the process parameters regarding the microstructure formation and development.
In a third step of the method of the present invention it may be provided that the component with restricted chemical composition is subjected to a heat treatment which takes place with a duration of from about 30 min to about 600 min in the range of the eutectoid temperature of the alloy, in particular from about 1040° C. to about 1170° C., wherein from the deformation microstructure a homogeneous, fine globular microstructure is formed, composed of the phases GAMMA, BETA0, ALPHA2 (γ, γ0, α2) and having an ordered atomic structure at room temperature:
Although the fine-grain formation in the material, created according to the above method, with isotropic microstructural morphology causes an increased strength within narrower limits, the toughness and creep resistance of the material may, however, be deemed to be inadequate for specific fields of application. However, this fine-grain structure is at best a prerequisite for achieving a largely fine, homogeneous microstructure with further annealing treatments to adjust desired mechanical properties of the component.
In order to in particular achieve the high-temperature properties of the material regarding an improvement in the ductility or an increase in the toughness and an increase in the creep resistance, it is provided according to the invention to subject the component with a fine grain structure created in the third step, in order to adjust optimized high-temperature material properties, to at least one post-annealing that is carried out in the range close to the alpha-transus temperature (Tα) of the alloy in the triple phase space (alpha, beta, gamma) for a duration of at least from about 30 min to about 6,000 min, after which the part is cooled within a time of less than about 10 min to a temperature of about 700° C. and subsequently further cooled, preferably in air, and in this manner a phase formation:
In particular the supersaturated ALPHA2 grains and a fine but not optimized microstructure formation result in a low material ductility and toughness at high strength values. Improved mechanical material properties can be achieved through a narrowed chemical composition, but the property profile is aimed at only specific application purposes.
Although a narrowed chemical composition of the material, as given above, can be used to achieve favorable proportions of the microstructure constituents with narrower dimensions and narrower content limits, wherein the advantages resulting therefrom are reflected in a certain specification of the mechanical property values. But essentially the prerequisites for an optimization of the high-temperature behavior of a component of a titanium-aluminum base alloy are established therewith in a highly advantageous manner.
A selection of the annealing time with a post-annealing close to the alpha-transus temperature (Tα) can be carried out with respect to an adjustment of desired phase quantities and the grain sizes. For example, the β phase is generally reduced with increasing annealing time.
After a thermal treatment in the alpha-transus area and a forced cooling, the microstructure phases essentially have an unordered atomic structure.
If during the production process after a post-annealing the component is subjected to at least one stabilizing annealing, which is carried out in a temperature range of from about 700° C. to about 1000° C., at best above the application temperature of the component for a duration of from about 60 min to about 1000 min and a subsequent slow cooling or furnace cooling at a rate of less than about 5° C./min, preferably less than about 1° C./min, to adjust or form the microstructure constituents:
By means of a stabilizing annealing with a slow cooling in which a sufficient atomic diffusion is retained a conversion of the supersaturated ALPHA2 grains into a lamellar ALPHA2/GAMMA structure takes place without a substantial change of the grain size. A lamellar structure in the previously supersaturated microstructure grains improves to a high degree the creep resistance of the material at high stresses in the temperature range around 700° C.
The further objective of the invention is attained with a component having near net shape dimensions of a titanium-aluminum base alloy with a chemical composition as set forth above, produced with a microstructure of the material, composed of the phases GAMMA, BETA0, ALPHA2 (γ, β0, α2) and having an unordered atomic structure at room temperature:
This component created with a highly economical production has a fine, globular, homogeneous microstructure with an identical property profile of the material in all directions, which can be used advantageously for a multitude of application purposes.
In order to achieve an improvement of the mechanical material properties, in particular an increase in the creep resistance, it is advantageous if the component is formed with a microstructure of the material of:
A special advantage is achieved with respect to ductility, strength and creep resistance of the material in all directions to the same extent at a high level if the component is formed with a microstructure of the material, is composed of the constituents:
The invention is explained in more detail below based on images comprising only one alloy composition.
The microstructure formations shown in
This alloy has a eutectoid temperature of Teu 1165° C.±7° C. and an alpha-transus temperature Tα=1243° C.±7° C., which temperatures were determined by differential thermoanalysis.
The microstructure images were taken with a 200-fold magnification with a scanning electron microscope in electron backscatter contrast.
The structure consisted of globular ALPHA2 grains with a grain size (measured as the diameter of the smallest transcribed circle) of 3.2 μm±1.9 μm with a volume proportion of about 25% of globular BETA0 grains with a grain size of 3.7 μm±2.1 μm with a volume proportion of about 26% and of globular GAMMA grains with a grain size of 5.7 μm±2.4 μm with a volume proportion of 49%.
The determined microstructural constituents were: ALPHA2 grains in globular formation with a grain size of 11.0 μm±5.8 vim with a volume proportion of 73%, globular BETA0 grains with a grain size of 4.5 μm±2.6 μm with a volume proportion of 11% and globular GAMMA grains with a grain size of 4.2 μm±2.2 μm with a volume proportion of 16%.
At this point it should be noted that the microstrucure and the property profile of the material can be adjusted by variations in the annealing temperature and/or the annealing time.
After the above heat treatment, the microstructure was composed of globular ALPHA2/GAMMA grains with lamellar α/γ structure with a grain size of 7.1 μm±3.8 μm with a volume proportion of 64% of globular BETA0 grains with a grain size of 2.3 μm±2.2 μm with a volume proportion of 13% and of globular GAMMA phases with a grain size of 2.7 μm±2.1 μm with a volume proportion of 23%.
As in the case of the other samples from test series as well, the most important mechanical properties were measured on this part. At room temperature the strength values Rp0.2 were above 720 MPa, Rm was above 810 MPa and the breaking elongation was above 1.6%.
At 700° C. in the creep test (ASTME139 or EN2005-5) at a test stress in the sample of 250 MPa and a load time of 100 h, a value Ap of less than 0.65% was determined.
It is noted that the foregoing examples have been provided merely for the purpose of explanation and are in no way to be construed as limiting of the present invention. While the present invention has been described with reference to an exemplary embodiment, it is understood that the words which have been used herein are words of description and illustration, rather than words of limitation. Changes may be made, within the purview of the appended claims, as presently stated and as amended, without departing from the scope and spirit of the present invention in its aspects. Although the present invention has been described herein with reference to particular means, materials and embodiments, the present invention is not intended to be limited to the particulars disclosed herein; rather, the present invention extends to all functionally equivalent structures, methods and uses, such as are within the scope of the appended claims.
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