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Microstructure Evolution and Damage Mechanism of DD9 Single Crystal Superalloy-Thermal Barrier Coating System Under High Temperature Oxidation: A Comparative Study with DD6

  • Pan Li
  • , Zhenyu Xin
  • , Fan Sun
  • , Xiaochao Jin
  • , Chao Zhang
  • Northwestern Polytechnical University Xian
  • Key Laboratory on the Impact Protection and Safety Assessment of Civil Aviation Vehicle
  • School of Aerospace
  • Xi'an Modern Chemistry Research Institute

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

3 Scopus citations

Abstract

This study investigates the microstructural evolution and damage mechanisms of the nickel-based single-crystal superalloy DD9-thermal barrier coating (TBC) system under 1050 °C high-temperature oxidation, while conducting a comparative analysis of oxidation behavior with the DD6-TBC system. Results show that both systems have similar oxidation mechanisms but face long-term oxidation drawbacks: as oxidation time increases, the thermally grown oxide (TGO) evolves into a mixed oxide layer and an Al2O3 layer, with initial rapid TGO growth consuming Al in the bond coat (BC) and subsequent Al depletion slowing growth, though long-term TGO accumulation raises cracking and spallation risks. DD9 and DD6 substrates significantly affect substrate-BC interfacial interdiffusion: the interdiffusion zone (IDZ) and secondary reaction zone (SRZ) grow continuously (SRZ growing faster), and linear topologically close-packed (TCP) phases precipitate in the SRZ, spreading throughout the substrate and impairing high-temperature mechanical properties. Specifically, DD9’s IDZ growth rate is faster than DD6’s in the first 800 h of oxidation but slows below DD6’s afterward, reflecting DD9’s superior long-term oxidation resistance due to better temperature resistance and high-temperature stability. This study clarifies key high-temperature service disadvantages of the two systems, providing experimental support for coated turbine blade life evaluation and a theoretical basis for optimizing third-generation single-crystal superalloy-TBC systems to enhance high-temperature service stability.

Original languageEnglish
Article number4332
JournalMaterials
Volume18
Issue number18
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2025

Keywords

  • damage mechanism
  • high-temperature oxidation
  • microstructural evolution
  • single-crystal superalloy
  • thermal barrier coating

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