
Phil Bendeich, David Carr, Ken Short, Richard Blevins, Caroline Curfs, Oliver Kirstein and Gerard Atkinson (ANSTO), Tom Holden (Northern Stress Technologies), and Ron Rogge (NRC-Chalk River)
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Steam turbines in thermal power stations are a crucial piece of infrastructure essential to modern life. At the turbine-blade tip, the steam is traveling at supersonic speeds and metal erosion occurs. Replacement of a complete set of blades costs is in the multi-million-dollar range. We have been using neutron strain scanning, in conjunction with the Cooperative Research Centre for Welded Structures, CSIRO and Swinburne University, to study a new in-situ repair method: laser cladding. A thin layer of Stellite® is welded onto the blade with a robot-controlled diode laser. We have studied both small coupons of Stellite® welded onto stainless steel (below left) and a real blade with a repair weld on its leading edge (below right). Neutron diffraction was used to study the spatial distribution of stresses below the Stellite® in both cases, and the experiments were performed at the NRU reactor at Chalk River, Canada, and at our own HIFAR reactor.
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In the case of the blade (see below left), the upper surface of the aerofoil leading edge is the free surface while the Stellite® repair is on the underside. The yellow and red diamonds represent the gauge volume (in the neutron experiment) which is scanned through the blade in a vertical direction, by translating the whole blade in the neutron beam.
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The final result, at one position from the leading edge is shown in right-hand panel above, with the 3 principal stresses mapped out on a half-millimetre scale, as function of depth underneath the repaired surface.
The net result of our study is that:
1. Laser cladding generates considerable tensile stresses on both the clad surface and the rear face of the parent metal.
2. There is a complex heat-affected zone stress profile due to differences in thermal expansion of the 2 materials.
3. Grit blasting imparts compressive stress to ~100 mm depth on the blade surface
4. Post welding heat treatment is effective in minimising the stress profile
The measurements on the HIFAR strain scanner used a gauge volume of 1 x 1 x 5 mm3, with each strain point taking ~25 minutes to collect. On the new KOWARI residual-stress diffractometer at the OPAL reactor both data-recording times and gauge volumes will be significantly reduced.