The Ni–22Cr–12Co–9Mo alloy (UNS alloy N06617, also known as alloy 617), of relatively common use at high temperature, is also one of the candidate materials for the most ambitious EU and US projects for future generations of power plants. Its icrostructure in the solution-annealed condition and after long-term creep ests at 700 and 800 1C was characterized by means of light optical, scanning electron and transmission electron microscopy. differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) analyses were also performed to check the usefulness of this technique to detect microstructural modification in specimens exposed to high temperature. Microstructural features were correlated to the hardness evolution in a chronological range of several thousand ho...