Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5456360 | Materials Science and Engineering: A | 2017 | 36 Pages |
Abstract
In order to understand more completely the formation of strain-induced martensite, phase structures were investigated both before and after plastic deformation, using austenitic stainless steels of various chemical compositions (carbon C=0.007-0.04 mass% and molybdenum Mo=0-2.10 mass%) and varying pre-strain levels (0-30%). Although the stainless steels consisted mainly of γ austenite, two martensite structures were generated following plastic deformation, comprising ε and αⲠmartensite. The martensitic structures were obtained in the twin deformation and slip bands. The severity of martensite formation (ε and αâ²) increased with increasing C content. It was found that αⲠmartensite was formed mainly in austenitic stainless steel lacking Mo, whereas a high Mo content led to a strong ε martensite structure, i.e. a weak αⲠmartensite. The formation of αⲠmartensite occurred from γ austenite via ε martensite, and was related to the slip deformation. Molybdenum in austenitic stainless steel had high slip resistance (or weak stress-induced martensite transformation), because of the stacking fault energy of the stainless steel affecting the austenite stability. This resulted in the creation of weak αⲠmartensite. Models of the martensitic transformations γ (fcc)âε (hcp)âαⲠ(bcc) were proposed on both the microscopic and nanoscopic scales. The αⲠmartensite content of austenitic stainless steel led to high tensile strength; conversely, ε martensite had a weak effect on the mechanical strength. The influence of martensitic formation on the mechanical properties was evaluated quantitatively by statistical analysis.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Materials Science (General)
Authors
Mitsuhiro Okayasu, Sai Tomida,