Abstrakt: |
Metallographie studies have been conducted on 1Cr-0.5Mo steel “taken from a pressure vessel which had been in service for 20 years in a hydrogenous environment at 524 °C. The original microstructure of the steel, reproduced by reheat treatment of the exposed material, consisted of proeutectoid ferrite and tempered bainite, the carbides being mainly cementite. The service exposure caused precipitation of needle-like M2C carbides in the ferritic regions and M7C3carbides in the vicinity of the original cementite particles. Chromium and molybdenum moved from solid solution to the carbides during the service exposure with 72 pct and 32 pct of the total chromium and molybdenum contents, respectively, remaining in solid solution after service for 20 years. |