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Effect of Hot Corrosion Demeanour of Key-hole Plasma Arc Welded Aerospace Grade Hastelloy X in molten Salts Environment

Publication Type : Conference Proceedings

Publisher : SAE International Journal of Advances and Current Practices in Mobility

Source : Material Science and Engineering, IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering, Volume 912, Pg. no. 032060, 2020

Url : https://saemobilus.sae.org/content/2020-28-0422/

Campus : Chennai

School : School of Engineering

Center : Research & Projects

Department : Mechanical Engineering

Year : 2020

Abstract : The current work investigates the hot corrosion demeanour of Hastelloy X weldment produced with autogenous mode through key-hole plasma arc welding (K-PAW). The hot corrosion test has been performed for weldment in molten salt-1 (MS-1) (75 % Na2SO4 + 25 % V2O5) and molten salt-2 (MS-2) (75 % Na2SO4 + 20 % V2O5 + 5 % NaCl) circumstance for 25 hrs (25 cycles) at 900 °C. The MS-1 substrate of both base metal and weldment provided the lowest weight gain than the MS-2 substrate. The NaCl in the MS-2 causes severe hot corrosion on the substrate, whereas the absence of NaCl in MS-1 reduces the hot corrosion effects. The highest parabolic constant is observed for K-PAW weldment in MS-2 condition. The tendency of hot corrosion rate follows the order of, Base Metal MS-1 < K-PAW MS-1 < Base Metal MS-2 < K-PAW MS-2. The occurrence of protective phases like chromium oxides (Cr2O3), spinel oxides (NiCr2O4 and NiFe2O4) Nickel oxide (NiO) on the substrate resist the further oxidation. But, the development of MoO3 and Fe2O3 phases are increased the cracking as well as spallation rate which promotes severe corrosion of the substrates. The plasma arc welded substrate and base metal in MS-1 condition are giving better resistance than in MS-2 at 900 °C.

Cite this Research Publication : Sathishkumar M, Subramani P, Natesh M, Venkateshkannan M, Arivazhagan N, Manikandan M. “Effect of Hot Corrosion Demeanour on Aerospace-Grade Hastelloy X Made by Pulsed and Constant Current Arc Welding in Molten Salt at 820 °C”, Material Science and Engineering, IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering, Volume 912, Pg. no. 032060, 2020

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