Abstract When used at high temperature in air, titanium-based alloys form an oxide scale at their surface but also dissolve large amount of oxygen in their metallic matrix and this… Click to show full abstract
Abstract When used at high temperature in air, titanium-based alloys form an oxide scale at their surface but also dissolve large amount of oxygen in their metallic matrix and this is a cause of embrittlement. Nitrogen is a secondary oxidant, which also dissolves in and embrittles the alloy. Oxidation experiments of Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-2Mo-0.1Si titanium-based alloy, for 1000 h at 650 °C in synthetic air (N2-20%O2) and in a mixture of Ar-20%O2, showed that nitrogen decreases both oxide scale growth and oxygen dissolution. Atom probe tomography was used to investigate the alloy/oxide interface. The results revealed that the nitrogen effect is due to the formation of interfacial layers of oxynitrides and nitride (Ti2N), but also to the formation of a nitrogen rich α-titanium-based solid solution, which all act as diffusion barriers for oxygen, because of their low oxygen solubility. A comparison between the experimental results and thermodynamic calculations is also reported.
               
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