A Grain Boundary Engineering Approach to Materials Reliability

Intergranular degradation processes, (e.g., corrosion, stress corrosion, cracking, creep cracking) are a frequent cause of premature and unpredictable service failure of engineering components. Recent advances in (1) understanding structure-property relationships for grain boundaries, and (2) characterization techniques for grain boundaries in polycrystalline materials, have provided the means for improved component lifetime prediction, and the opportunity to engineer intergranular-degradation resistant microstructures. In this work, we present our previously developed geometric models for grain boundary structure and grain size effects on intergranular degradation susceptibility. Specific examples are presented of the successful application of the ‘grain boundary engineering’ approach to the prediction and mitigation of intergranular corrosion, stress corrosion cracking, and creep cracking in Ni-based materials.