The effect of microstructure on creep resistance of the low carbon chromium steel X20CrMoV121 after 100‐hours of static‐load test at a temperature of 580 °C and constant stress of 170 MPa was investigated. The specimens for the experiments were extracted from steam pipes of a steam power plant and heat treated. The effect of isothermal annealing on the microstructure and hardness as well as the kinetics of the precipitation of the carbide particles were determined.
The experimental coarsening rate of M 23 C 6 particles at 8008C was about three times greater than that calculated from the slightly modified Lifshitz-Slyozov-Wagner equation. Applying a simplified relation, the coarsening rate was deduced for M 23 C 6 particles in range 800-5508C. The calculated coarsening rates are compared to data in references.
The effect of grain space orientation and particle-matrix stress transfer on dislocation movement forces with difference of acting stress components in slip plane in climb direction is discussed. A modified equation for calculation of creep rate of creep resistant steel including M 23 C 6 particles size and spacing is proposed. Small differences of experimental and calculated creep rates are obtained by stress exponent n53?65.
The Central European Geodynamics Project CERGOP-2, funded by the European Union from 2003 to 2006 under the 5th Framework Programme, benefited from repeated measurements of the coordinates of epoch and permanent GPS stations of the Central European GPS Reference Network (CEGRN), starting in 1994. Here we report on the results of the systematic processing of available data up to 2005. The analysis has yielded velocities for some 60 sites, covering a variety of Central European tectonic provinces, from the Adria Indenter to the Tauern Window, the Dinarides, the Pannonian Basin, the Vrancea Seismic Zone and the Carpathian Mountains. The estimated velocities define kinematical patterns which outline, with varying spatial resolution depending on the station density and history, the present-day surface kinematics in Central Europe. Horizontal velocities are analyzed after removal from the ITRF2000 estimated velocities of a rigid rotation accounting for the mean motion of Europe: a ∼2.3 mm/year north-south oriented convergence rate between Adria and the Southern Alps that can be considered to be the present-day velocity of the Adria Indenter relative to the European Foreland. An eastward extrusion zone initiates at the Tauern Window. The lateral eastward flow towards the Pannonian Basin exhibits a gentle gradient from 1 to 1.5 mm/year immediately east of the Tauern Window to zero in the Pannonian Basin. This kinematic continuity implies that the Pannonian plate fragment recently suggested by seismic data does not require a specific Eulerian pole. On the southeastern boundary of the Adria microplate, we report a velocity drop from 4 to 4.5 mm/year motion near Matera to ∼1 mm/year north of the Dinarides, in the southwestern part of the Pannonian Basin. A positive velocity gradient as one moves south from West Ukraine across Rumania and Bulgaria is estimated to be 2 mm/year on a scale of 600-800 km, as if the crust were dragged by the counterclockwise rotation along
The number of carbide particles stringers at boundaries and subboundaries of martensite per unit of surface decreases with the third root of tempering time at 1073 K. The accelerated creep rate at 853 K depends on the number of stringers of carbide particles per unit of surface, and below an inflection point, the creep rate increases strongly. Equations relating for creep rate are discussed in terms of experimental creep rate, number of carbide particles stringers and average particles spacing.
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