4.2 Article

CHARACTERIZATION OF CORROSION BEHAVIOR OF INCONEL 617 WELDED JOINTS USING CMT-GMAW MULTI-CONTROL WELDING

Journal

SURFACE REVIEW AND LETTERS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WORLD SCIENTIFIC PUBL CO PTE LTD
DOI: 10.1142/S0218625X24500239

Keywords

Inconel 617; heat input; microhardness; grain boundary; corrosion resistance

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This study investigated the effect of CMT-GMAW multi-control welding on the microstructure, hardness, and electrochemical properties of Inconel 617 alloy. The results showed that increasing the wire feed rate led to a decrease in microhardness and an increase in corrosion rate. This was attributed to increased carbide precipitation and segregation, resulting in poorer corrosion resistance compared to the base metal.
This work addressed the effect of CMT-GMAW multi-control welding of Inconel 617 alloy with different wire feed rates (8.9, 9.4, and 9.9 m/min) on the microstructure, hardness, and electrochemical properties. The weld joints are composed of columnar dendritic structure with cellular crystals. Electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) study showed equiaxed dendrite at the center of weld metal with growth direction perpendicular to the fusion boundary. The weldments showed diffraction peaks at 43.53 degrees degrees, 50.12 degrees degrees, and 74.82 degrees degrees, and these peaks mainly represent gamma (gamma) and gamma prime (gamma ') phases along with the carbide peaks of Ti (C, N), M2323C(6) and M6C. The Base metal (BM) had a lower hardness (232 +/- 10 HV0.20.2) and lower corrosion rate (0.212 mpy) than the weld joints. The increase in wire feed rate (WFR) results in the decrease of microhardness (267 +/- 5 - 251 +/- 6 HV0.20.2) and increase in corrosion rate (1.833-28.140 mpy). The base metal exhibited higher potential (Ecorr) and lower current density (Icorr) than the weld joints. As wire feed rate (WFR) increases, heat input increases; solidification time increases, grain boundaries coarsen, resulting in a lower grain boundary (GB) density, and hence increased carbide precipitation and segregation in weld zone leading to higher stable anodic current density, which caused corrosion resistance to deteriorating. The BM was more corrosion resistant than the weld joints. The metallurgical and physical changes caused by the welding process affect the corrosion resistance of the weld joints. This leads to the weld metal corroding faster than the base metal.

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