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Improving creep strength of 316L stainless steel by alloying with nitrogen

► Nitrogen was found to be beneficial to creep properties at all the stress levels. ► Creep rupture life increased almost 10 times by increasing nitrogen content from 0.07wt.% to 0.22wt.%. ► The extent of internal creep damage and surface creep damage decreased with increasing nitrogen content. The...

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Published in:Materials science & engineering. A, Structural materials : properties, microstructure and processing Structural materials : properties, microstructure and processing, 2012-02, Vol.535, p.76-83
Main Authors: Mathew, M.D., Laha, K., Ganesan, V.
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description ► Nitrogen was found to be beneficial to creep properties at all the stress levels. ► Creep rupture life increased almost 10 times by increasing nitrogen content from 0.07wt.% to 0.22wt.%. ► The extent of internal creep damage and surface creep damage decreased with increasing nitrogen content. The influence of nitrogen on the creep behaviour of 316L(N) SS has been studied at nitrogen levels of 0.07, 0.11, 0.14 and 0.22wt.%. Creep tests were carried out at 923K at stress levels of 140, 175, 200 and 225MPa with rupture life up to 16,000h. Creep rupture strength was found to increase substantially with increase in nitrogen content; rupture life increased almost 10 times by increasing nitrogen content from 0.07wt.% to 0.22wt.%. Steady state creep rate decreased significantly with increasing nitrogen content. The extent of internal creep damage and surface creep damage decreased remarkably with increasing nitrogen content, resulting in increased creep rupture strength. Solid solution strengthening, increase in Young's modulus, decrease in stacking fault energy and matrix precipitation of carbonitrides have contributed to the increase in creep strength with increasing nitrogen content.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.msea.2011.12.044
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1873-4936
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source ScienceDirect Freedom Collection 2022-2024
subjects 316L
Applied sciences
Austenitic stainless steels
Creep
Creep (materials)
Creep rupture
Creep rupture strength
Creep strength
Creep tests
Damage
Exact sciences and technology
Heat resistant steels
Materials science
Mechanical properties and methods of testing. Rheology. Fracture mechanics. Tribology
Metals. Metallurgy
Nitrogen
Reactor
Rupture
Stainless steel
title Improving creep strength of 316L stainless steel by alloying with nitrogen
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