January 13, 2023
Journal Article

Microstructure and mechanical properties of friction stir welded Haynes 282

Abstract

Advanced ultrasupercritical (A-USC) steam plants are designed to operate at high temperatures and pressures due to the necessity for higher operational efficiency. The extreme operating conditions of A-USC requires the deployment of precipitation strengthened Ni-base alloys that exhibit elevated temperature strength and good fabricability. Fusion welding of precipitation strengthened nickel alloys lead to solidification cracking in fusion zone and/or liquation cracking in heat affected zone. Therefore, an alternative non-melting welding technique is a necessity to efficiently join nickel alloys. In the current study, friction stir welding, a solid state joining technique was implemented on a precipitation strengthened nickel-based superalloy, Haynes 282. Detailed microstructural and mechanical properties characterization was carried out. The processed region exhibited wrought, fine-grained microstructure, absence of weld defects such as voids and cracks and absence of elemental segregation. Both hardness and cross-weld tensile tests demonstrated that the weld region was stronger than the base material. And the cross-weld tensile samples failed in the base material. Based on joint efficiency analysis, friction stir welded Haynes 282 outperformed fusion welds.

Published: January 13, 2023

Citation

Komarasamy M., C.B. Smith, J.T. Darsell, W. Choi, S. Jana, and G.J. Grant. 2021. Microstructure and mechanical properties of friction stir welded Haynes 282. Materials Characterization 182. PNNL-SA-161637. doi:10.1016/j.matchar.2021.111558

Research topics