Multicomponent High-Strength Low-Alloy Steel Precipitation-Strengthened by Sub-nanometric Cu Precipitates and MC Carbides.

Autor: Jain, Divya, Isheim, Dieter, Hunter, Allen, Seidman, David
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Zdroj: Metallurgical & Materials Transactions. Part A; Aug2016, Vol. 47 Issue 8, p3860-3872, 13p
Abstrakt: HSLA-115 is a novel high-strength low-alloy structural steel derived from martensitic Cu-bearing HSLA-100. HSLA-100 is typically used in conditions with overaged Cu precipitates, to obtain acceptable impact toughness and ductility. Present work on HSLA-115 demonstrates that incorporating sub-nanometric-sized MC carbides along with Cu precipitates produces higher strength steels that still meet impact toughness and ductility requirements. Isothermal aging at 823 K (550 °C) precipitates MC carbides co-located with the Cu precipitates and distributed heterogeneously at lath boundaries and dislocations. 3D atom-probe tomography is used to characterize the evolution of these precipitates at 823 K (550 °C) in terms of mean radii, number densities, and volume fractions. These results are correlated with microhardness, impact toughness, and tensile strength. The optimum combination of mechanical properties, 972 MPa yield strength, 24.8 pct elongation to failure, and 188.0 J impact toughness at 255 K (−18 °C), is attained after 3-hour aging at 823 K (550 °C). Strengthening by MC precipitates offsets the softening due to overaging of Cu precipitates and tempering of martensitic matrix. It is shown that this extended yield strength plateau can be used as a design principle to optimize strength and toughness at the same time. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index