Title of article :
Superplastic martensitic Mn–Si–Cr–C steel with 900% elongation Original Research Article
Author/Authors :
H. Zhang، نويسنده , , B. Bai، نويسنده , , D. Raabe، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2011
Abstract :
High-strength (1.2–1.5)C–(2–2.5)Mn–(1.5–2)Si–(0.8–1.5)Cr steels (mass%) consisting of martensite and carbides exhibit excellent superplastic properties (e.g. strain rate sensitivity m ≈ 0.5, elongation ≈900% at 1023 K). A homogeneous martensitic starting microstructure is obtained through thermomechanical processing (austenitization plus 1.2 true strain, followed by quenching). Superplastic forming leads to a duplex structure consisting of ferrite and spherical micro-carbides. Through 1.5–2% Si alloying, carbides precipitate at hetero-phase interfaces and martensite blocks at the beginning of superplastic forming. Via Ostwald ripening, these interface carbides grow at the expense of carbides precipitating at martensite laths, thereby promoting ferrite dynamic recrystallization. Simultaneously, carbides at ferrite grain boundaries retard the growth of recrystallized ferrite grains. Due to 2–2.5% Mn and 0.8–1.5% Cr alloying, carbide coarsening is suppressed owing to the slow diffusion of these elements. As a result, fine and homogeneous ferrite plus spherical carbide duplex microstructures with a ferrite grain size of ∼1.5 μm are obtained after superplastic forming.
Keywords :
Thermomechanical processing , Steel , Superplasticity , Carbide , Martensite
Journal title :
ACTA Materialia
Journal title :
ACTA Materialia