Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1521998 | Materials Chemistry and Physics | 2014 | 6 Pages |
Abstract
The influence of phosphorus (0.15 wt.%) on iron oxide scale adhesion is studied for short time oxidation of carbon steel in air at 800 and 1000 °C. Adhesion is measured after cooling to room temperature by Vickers indentation. It is shown to increase with increasing oxidation time as the result of the formation of a phosphorus-containing phase at the steel–scale interface. It also exhibits much higher values after oxidation at 1000 °C than after oxidation at 800 °C. This is suggested to be due to molten oxide infiltrating the metal grain boundaries during oxidation at the highest temperature. The FeO–Fe3(PO4)2 eutectic temperature of 940 °C appears therefore as a critical parameter in the steel descaling process on the production line.
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Authors
E. Ahtoy, M. Picard, G. Leprince, A. Galerie, Y. Wouters, X. Wang, A. Atkinson,