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Effects of Long-Term Service on The Aging Behavior of A Water-Quenched U6Nb Alloy
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 February 2011
Abstract
Microhardness testing and transmission electron microscopy are used to study the effects of long-term service on the aging behavior of a water-quenched U-6wt.% Nb alloy when subjected to isothermal aging at 200°XC. The original α''c phase in the WQ-U6Nb alloy is found to become partially ordered over 18 years of aging at ambient temperatures, i.e., natural aging, forming a microstructure that is featured by antiphase domain boundaries (APBs). When subsequently aged at 200 °C, an ordered phase U3Nb is precipitated through a nucleation-and-growth mechanism, suppressing spinodal decomposition that occurs when the water-quenched alloy is artificially aged at the same temperature. The different phase transformation paths lead to different microhardness changes during artificial aging: the naturally aged alloy is more slowly hardened, but to a greater microhardness peak value.
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- Copyright © Materials Research Society 2007