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Meeting 2020 TMS Annual Meeting & Exhibition
Symposium Hume-Rothery Symposium: Thermodynamics, Phase Equilibria and Kinetics for Materials Design and Engineering
Presentation Title Thermodynamic Modeling of Precipitates of Topologically Close-packed Phases
Author(s) Thomas Hammerschmidt
On-Site Speaker (Planned) Thomas Hammerschmidt
Abstract Scope The precipitation of topologically close-packed (TCP) phases in superalloys is highly undesirable due to the detrimental effect on the mechanical properties. The structural stability of bulk TCP phases in thermodynamic equilibrium is well understood but little is known about the dominating factors that govern the formation of TCP phase precipitates within a superalloy matrix. Here, a thermodynamic modelling approach of the TCP phase precipitates is presented. It connects the experimentally observed local chemical composition with empirical maps of bulk TCP phase stability and with solidification modelling based on CALPHAD databases. Several examples for Ni-base and Co-base superalloys indicate that the precipitates exhibit chemical compositions that are expected to form a TCP phase also as bulk material. An example of the limits of this purely thermodynamic interpretation is the stress-induced formation of TCP phases that was observed recently in low-cycle fatigue tests of a Ni-based superalloy.
Proceedings Inclusion? Undecided

OTHER PAPERS PLANNED FOR THIS SYMPOSIUM

A Hexagonal Close Packed Multi-principal-element Alloy Identified Computationally
Alloys, Processing, Applications, Models and Software: The Wide Domain of Gibbs Energies Sets Giving Impulse to Invention
Application of Calphad-based Computational Tools to Alloy Development for Additive Manufacturing
Calphad Applications and Challenges in Gas Turbine Coatings
CALPHAD Databases for Co-based Alloys
Computational Thermodynamics in Microstructure Modelling and Beyond
Developing CALPHAD Databases for Thermophysical Properties of Metals and Alloys
Development of a Comprehensive Diffusion (mobility) Database for Lightweight Magnesium Alloys
Diffusion Mobilities in Co-Ni-Al-Cr System
First-principles Thermodynamics of Refractory Alloys and their Oxides
How Can the CALPHAD Method Do Better?
Improvement of a CALPHAD Database for the Development of Next Generation TiAl Alloys by Targeted Key Experiments on High-temperature Phase Equilibria – The EU Project Advance
Industrial Applications of Thermodynamic and Kinetics Modeling
Interaction of Moving Grain Boundaries with Solutes in Alloys
Materials Property Databases Developed by the CALPHAD Approach and Their Applications in Materials Design
Measurements of Thermophysical Properties of Metals and Alloys as Input for Computational Thermodynamics
On the Intrinsic Alloying Behavior in the A and M Sublattices of MAX Phases
On the Next Generation of Thermodynamic CALPHAD Databases
Phase Equilibria and Interfacial Migration in Stressed Solids
Phase Equilibria in High-entropy and Complex-concentrated Alloys
Selected Observations of Microstructural Development in Additively Manufactured Metallic Alloys
The Application of Metastable Equilibria in the Analysis of Transformation Behavior
The Third Generation of CALPHAD Descriptions: Case Studies on Al-C and W-C
Thermodynamic Assessment of the Fe-B and Fe-B-C- Systems
Thermodynamic Modeling of Precipitates of Topologically Close-packed Phases
Thermodynamics at Equilibrium and Non-equilibrium – Genomic Tools for Materials Design
Tomorrow fcc Ordering Model
William Hume-Rothery Award Lecture: Phase Diagrams, Computational Thermodynamics and CALPHAD

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