The quantification of key microstructural parameters as a function of aging or creep exposure time is commonplace in the assessment of 9Cr Creep Strength Enhanced Ferritic (CSEF) power-plant steels. In these studies, the sample is either assumed chemically homogenous at the micro-scale or that a material average will be achieved by collecting enough images at random locations. In this paper, the micro-scale chemical homogeneity of two ex-service boiler components, a pipe and a forging, are quantitatively assessed using high sensitivity chemical mapping from µ-XRF. The compositional variation was as expected most pronounced in the larger elements Mo and Nb, where a > 20 pct difference in composition was present between positively and negatively segregated areas. The effect of this micro-segregation on local variations in Laves phase particle characteristics was investigated using SEM images. This showed a factor of two difference in the number of particles and the area coverage between positively and negatively Mo-segregated regions. This result was consistent with the thermodynamic equilibrium predictions of the phase content based on the observed level of segregation.
This is an Accepted Manuscript for the Microscopy and Microanalysis 2020 Proceedings. This version may be subject to change during the production process.
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