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Link between b.c.c.-f.c.c. orientation relationship and austenite morphology in CF8M stainless steel. | LitMetric

Link between b.c.c.-f.c.c. orientation relationship and austenite morphology in CF8M stainless steel.

J Appl Crystallogr

Université Paris-Saclay, CentraleSupélec, ENS Paris-Saclay, CNRS LMPS - Laboratoire de Mécanique Paris-Saclay, 91190Gif-sur-Yvette, France.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Slow-cooled CF8M duplex stainless steel is critical for nuclear reactor coolant pipes due to its ability to endure harsh conditions but may become brittle over long-term aging.
  • Electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analysis shows its microstructure features millimeter-scale ferritic grains with austenite lath packets that develop specific crystallographic orientations.
  • A new methodology is proposed to link crystallographic orientation and microstructural features, showing that austenite lath normals align closely with an invariant direction of the parent ferritic phase, supporting the Pitsch orientation relationship.

Article Abstract

Slow-cooled CF8M duplex stainless steel is used for critical parts of the primary coolant pipes of nuclear reactors. This steel can endure severe service conditions, but it tends to become more brittle upon very long-term aging (tens of years). Therefore, it is essential to understand its specific microstructure and temporal evolution. As revealed by electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) analyses, the microstructure consists of millimetre-scale ferritic grains within which austenite lath packets have grown with preferred crystallographic orientations concerning the parent ferritic phase far from the ferrite grain boundaries. In these lath packets where the austenite phase is nucleated, the lath morphology and crystal orientation accommodate the two ferrite orientations. Globally, the Pitsch orientation relationship appears to display the best agreement with the experimental data compared with other classical relationships. The austenite lath packets are parallel plate-shaped laths, characterized by their normal . A novel methodology is introduced to elucidate the expected relationship between and the crystallographic orientation given the coarse interfaces, even though is only partly known from the observation surface, in contrast to the 3D crystal orientations measured by EBSD. The distribution of retrieved normals is shown to be concentrated over a set of discrete orientations. Assuming that the ferrite and austenite obey the Pitsch orientation relationship, the determined lath normals are close to an invariant direction of the parent phase given by the same orientation relationship.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11460382PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1107/S1600576724008392DOI Listing

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