Abstract
The Haynes 282 Ni-based superalloy (57Ni-20Cr-10Co-8.5Mo-2.1Ti-1.5Al) is a very promising candidate for the fabrication by additive manufacturing of gas turbine components of complex geometries. Alloy 282 was fabricated by electron beam melting (EBM) and exposed to two different heat treatments, (a) solution anneal (SA) at 1135°C followed by the standard 2-step aging treatment (2h at 1010°C plus 8h at 788°C) and (b) SA followed by 4h 800°C. Large elongated grains were observed for the as-fabricated and annealed EBM 282 materials, with a γ′ (Ni3(Al,Ti)) average size of ~100 nm and 20 nm, respectively. The as-fabricated EBM 282 alloy exhibited good ductility at 20-900°C and tensile strength slightly lower than the tensile strength of wrought 282. Annealing the alloy resulted in a moderate increase of the alloy strength at 800 and 900°C but a decrease of the alloy ductility. The creep lifetime at 800°C, 200MPa of the as-fabricated and annealed EBM 282 specimens machined along the build direction was 2 times and 1.5 times superior to the expected lifetime for wrought 282, respectively. For creep specimens machined perpendicular to the build direction, the lifetimes were ~25% lower compared to the wrought alloy. These creep results are directly related to the strong grain texture of the EBM 282 alloy and the limited impact of the initial γ′ (Ni3(Al,Ti)) size on alloy 282 creep properties.