• DocumentCode
    1389438
  • Title

    Magnetic and Mechanical Properties of Newly Developed High-Strength Nonoriented Electrical Steel

  • Author

    Tanaka, Ichiro ; Yashiki, Hiroyoshi

  • Author_Institution
    Corp. R&D Labs., Sumitomo Metal Ind. Ltd., Amagasaki, Japan
  • Volume
    46
  • Issue
    2
  • fYear
    2010
  • Firstpage
    290
  • Lastpage
    293
  • Abstract
    New, nonoriented electrical steel featuring great strength and low core loss has been developed. The strengthening mechanism that was mainly applied was dislocation strengthening. The typical properties of developed steel of 690 and 780 MPa grades in tensile strength with a thickness of 0.35 mm were 46 and 51 W/kg in W 10/400 , respectively. The core loss of the 780 MPa grade developed steel was a third part of that of a 980-MPa grade dual-phase steel in W 10/400. Furthermore, the fatigue strength of the 780-MPa grade developed steel was found to be superior to that of the 980-MPa grade dual-phase steel. These excellent characteristics were ascribed to the specific microstructure of the steel, in which dislocations introduced by cold rolling were rearranged and a few recrystallized grains were formed within the dislocation-reduced deformed matrix. Solute Nb would be responsible for this favorable microstructure evolution through moderate suppression of dislocation annihilation and consequent retardation of recrystallization during annealing. Another outstanding characteristic of the developed steel was its nickel-free chemical composition, by which a rise in alloying costs could be minimized.
  • Keywords
    annealing; cold rolling; deformation; dislocations; fatigue; ferromagnetic materials; grain size; magnetic leakage; steel; tensile strength; FeCJk; annealing; cold rolling; core loss; deformed matrix; dislocation strengthening; fatigue strength; high-strength nonoriented electrical steel; magnetic properties; mechanical properties; microstructure; recrystallized grains; size 0.35 mm; tensile strength; Alloying; Annealing; Chemicals; Core loss; Costs; Fatigue; Mechanical factors; Microstructure; Niobium; Steel; Iron alloys; niobium; silicon steel; soft magnetic materials;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Magnetics, IEEE Transactions on
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9464
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/TMAG.2009.2033457
  • Filename
    5393097