Abstract
This study investigated the creep behaviors and properties of a cast low-Ta-containing Ti-48Al-3Nb-1.5Ta (at.%) alloy with fine-grained nearly-lamellar (FGNL) microstructure in the condition of 800∼900 °C and 150–250 MPa. The stress exponent and creep activation energy were 2.0 and 395 kJ mol−1, respectively. The Ti-48Al-3Nb-1.5Ta alloy exhibited superior creep resistance, reaching the level of advanced TNM+ and TNB alloys. It was attributed to the high-temperature strengthening effect of Nb and Ta alloying, which impeded diffusion-dependent creep and reduced the stacking fault energy to suppress dislocation climb. Ta alloying elevated the brittle-ductile transition temperature (BDTT) to ∼850 °C under creep conditions. In addition, the Ti-48Al-3Nb-1.5Ta alloy showed good microstructural stability with no detectable precipitation of β(βo) and ω/τ phases during prolonged creep exposure. Compared to Nb, Ta alloying had a better high-temperature strengthening effect and a lower tendency to form ω/τ phases. Replacing some Nb with Ta can improve the microstructure stability while maintaining the creep resistance of the current TiAl-Nb alloy at 800–900 °C.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 108795 |
Journal | Intermetallics |
Volume | 183 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 2025 |
Keywords
- Cast γ-TiAl alloys
- Creep
- Phase transformation
- Tantalum
- Transmission electronic microscopy (TEM)