Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1575786 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2013 | 10 Pages |
Abstract
TRIP (transformation-induced-plasticity) steel with a chemical composition of 0.19C-0.30Si-1.76Mn-1.52Al (weight percentage, wt%) have been treated by intercritical annealing and austempering process. The microstructures of the obtained samples consist of the ferrite, the bainite and the retained austenite phase. The volume fractions of the bainite and the retained austenite gradually increase with increasing the temperature of the intercritical annealing. Consequently, significantly different mechanical properties have been observed. The sample annealed at 820 °C (for 120 s) and partitioned at 400 °C (for 300 s) has the best combination of ultimate tensile strength (UTS, â¼682 MPa) and elongation to failure (â¼70%) with about 26% of bainitic ferrite plates and 17% retained austenite in its microstructure. The retained austenite has a lamella morphology with 100â300 nm in thickness and 2â5 µm in length. On the contrary, the sample annealed at the same temperature without the partitioning process yields much lower UTS and elongation to failure.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Y.F. Shen, Y.D. Liu, X. Sun, Y.D. Wang, L. Zuo, R.D.K. Misra,