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Intermetallic Alloys Based on Orthorhombic Titanium Aluminide
Author(s) -
Kumpfert J.
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
advanced engineering materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.938
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 1527-2648
pISSN - 1438-1656
DOI - 10.1002/1527-2648(200111)3:11<851::aid-adem851>3.0.co;2-g
Subject(s) - materials science , titanium aluminide , metallurgy , intermetallic , microstructure , orthorhombic crystal system , titanium , ductility (earth science) , titanium alloy , ultimate tensile strength , alloy , toughness , fracture toughness , creep , crystallography , crystal structure , chemistry
Orthorhombic titanium aluminides represent the youngest class of alloys emerging out of the group of titanium aluminides. These new materials are based on the ordered orthorhombic phase Ti 2 AlNb, which was discovered for the first time in the late 1980s as a constituent in a Ti 3 Al‐base alloy. In the 1990s primarily simple ternary Ti–Al–Nb orthorhombic alloys were investigated in countries such as the US, UK, India, France, Japan, and Germany. The drive was mainly provided by jet engine manufacturers and related research labs looking for a damage‐tolerant, high‐temperature, light‐weight material. This follows the aim of further extending the use of lower density titanium‐base materials in temperature regimes, where heavy nickel‐base superalloys are the only alternative today. The present understanding of microstructure–property relationships for orthorhombic titanium aluminides reveals an attractive combination of low and high temperature loading capabilities. These involve high room‐temperature ductility and good formability, high specific elevated temperature tensile and fatigue strength, reasonable room‐temperature fracture toughness and crack growth behavior, good creep, oxidation, and ignition resistance combined with a low thermal expansion coefficient. This article reviews the aspects of composition–microstructure–property relationships in comparison to near‐α titanium, TiAl, and nickel‐base alloys. Special emphasis is also placed on the environmental degradation of the mechanical properties.