Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1578996 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2010 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
A sandwich-structured bimetallic blank containing high chromium cast iron (HCCI) and low carbon steel (LCS) claddings was newly prepared by composite casting, and then the blank was hot-rolled into composite plate. The evolution of microstructures, phase constituents and texture components of hot-rolled HCCI was analyzed. During hot rolling, the eutectic carbides of M7C3 were broken and partly dissolved into the austenitic matrix, resulting in the precipitation of secondary carbides of M2C during air cooling. Significant refinement of austenitic grains and carbides are discovered in hot-rolled HCCI specimens. The hardness of hot-rolled HCCI increases from around 600.5 to 850-900Â HV due to the large carbides volume fraction, indicating a high strength and good wear resistance of hot-rolled HCCI. Strong orientation densities at {1Â 1Â 0}ã4Â 9Â 0ã, {1Â 1Â 1}ã1Â 1Â 0ã, {0Â 0Â 1}ã1Â 4Â 2ã and {1Â 1Â 2}ã1Â 1Â 0ã location are found after hot rolling.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Guoliang Xie, Jingtao Han, Jing Liu, Zhengyi Jiang,