C. Alonso de Celada Casero
Please Note
15 records found
1
Quenching & Partitioning (Q&P) steels owe their good strength-ductility combinations to the martensite/austenite (α’/γ) mechanical interactions and to the formation of mechanically-induced martensite (α′mech) through the transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) effect. An essential role is played by carbon, whose distribution among the phases can be modified through the Q&P route. This study presents a methodology to systematically and quantitatively examine the influence of the α’/γ mechanical interactions on the overall work hardening of the steel with respect to the role of carbon in the martensite. The methodology rests on the generation of a 3D micro-mechanical model that allows to derive, by crystal plasticity simulations, the overall response of a mechanically-stable α’/γ virtual microstructure. In combination with theoretical knowledge on hardening, the comparison between the experimental and simulated mechanical responses enables the quantification of the influence of the martensite carbon content and distribution on the overall TRIP strengthening contribution of the steel. The approach is applied to two low carbon Q&P-processed α’/γ microstructures of similar initial volume fractions of austenite and α′mech formation kinetics with strain, but one containing a Nb-microaddition and displaying improved strength-ductility values. It is shown that the martensite strength and work hardening ability might additionally enhance or partially counteract the strengthening contribution from the austenite-to-α′mech transformation during uniaxial loading. The results of this study highlight that the processing-dependent properties of the carbon-depleted martensite should be considered in the optimization of Q&P processed steels.
The article focuses on the effect of alloying and microstructure on formability of advanced high strength steels (AHSSs) processed via quenching and partitioning (Q&P). Three different Q&P steels with different combination of alloying elements and volume fraction of retained austenite are subjected to uniaxial tensile and Nakajima testing. Tensile mechanical properties are determined, and the forming limit diagrams (FLDs) are plotted. Microstructure of the tested samples is analyzed, and dramatic reduction of retained austenite fraction is detected. It is demonstrated that all steels are able to accumulate much higher amount of plastic strain when tested using Nakajima method. The observed phenomenon is related to the multiaxial stress state and strain gradients through the sheet thickness resulting in a fast transformation of retained austenite, as well as the ability of the tempered martensitic matrix to accumulate plastic strain. Surprisingly, a Q&P steel with the highest volume fraction of retained austenite and highest tensile ductility shows the lowest formability among studied grades. The latter observation is related to the highest sum of fractions of initial fresh martensite and stress/strain induced martensite promoting formation of microcracks. Their role and ability of tempered martensitic matrix to accumulate plastic deformation during forming of Q&P steels is discussed.
Austenite stabilization through carbon partitioning from martensite into austenite is an essential aspect of the quenching and partitioning (Q&P) process. Substitutional alloying elements are often included in the chemical composition of Q&P steels to further control the microstructure development by inhibiting carbide precipitation (silicon) and further stabilize austenite (manganese and nickel). However, these elements can interfere in the microstructure development, especially when high partitioning temperatures are considered. In this study, the microstructural development during the Q&P process of four low-carbon, medium-manganese steels with varying contents of silicon and nickel is investigated. During partitioning at 400 °C, silicon hinders cementite precipitation in primary martensite thereby assisting carbon partitioning from martensite to austenite. During partitioning at temperatures of 500 °C and 600 °C, presence of nickel inhibits pearlite formation and promotes austenite reversion, respectively. It is observed that the stabilization of austenite is significantly enhanced through the addition of nickel by slowing down the kinetics of competitive reactions that are stimulated during the partitioning stage. Results of this study provide an understanding of the interplay among carbon, silicon and nickel during Q&P processing that will allow the development of new design strategies to tailor the microstructure of this family of alloys.
In present study, the potential of Niobium (Nb) to improve the mechanical properties of Quenched and Partitioning (Q&P) steels is investigated. To this purpose, the effect of the addition of Nb on the microstructure and mechanical properties of a Q&P steel was thoroughly analysed with special attention on the thermal stability of the retained austenite. The mechanical properties of the Nb Q&P steel were determined using static and dynamic tensile tests and compared to the properties of a Nb free Q&P steel. Additionally, the effect of test temperature was quantified by static and dynamic tests in the temperature range from −40 °C to +80 °C. It was found that the Nb induced grain refinement together with the stabilising effect of Nb on the retained austenite, resulted in an excellent low temperature behaviour of the Nb Q&P steel. Additionally, the high temperature, dynamic behaviour of the Nb micro-alloyed steel was improved with respect to the Nb free steel due to the presence of a large fraction of retained austenite with low thermal stability.
Because of their excellent combination of strength and ductility, quenching and partitioning (Q & P) steels have a great chance of being added to the third generation of advanced high strength steels. The large ductility of Q & P steels arises from the presence of 10% to 15% of retained austenite which postpones necking due to the transformation induced plasticity (TRIP) effect. Moreover, Q & P steels show promising forming properties with favourable Lankford coefficients, while their planar anisotropy is low due to a weak texture. The stability of the metastable austenite is the key to obtain tailored properties for these steels. To become part of the newest generation of advanced high strength steels, Q & P steels have to preserve their mechanical properties at dynamic strain rates and over a wide range of temperatures. Therefore, in the present study, a low-Si Q & P steel was tested at temperatures from -40 °C to 80 °C and strain rates from 0.001 s-1 to 500 s-1. Results show that the mechanical properties are well-preserved at the lowest temperatures. Indeed, at -40 °C and room temperature, no significant loss of the deformation capacity is observed even at dynamic strain rates. This is attributed to the presence of a large fraction of austenite that is so (thermally) stable that it does not transform in the absence of deformation. In addition, the high stability of the austenite decreases the elongation at high test temperatures (80 °C). The additional adiabatic heating in the dynamic tests causes the largest reduction of the uniform strain for the samples tested at 80 °C. Quantification of the retained austenite fraction in the samples after testing confirmed that, at the highest temperature and strain rate, the TRIP effect is suppressed.
The influence of the prior austenite grain size (PAGS), varying between 6 and 185 μm, on the microstructural development of a low carbon steel during quenching and partitioning (Q&P) processing is investigated. The effect on the size and morphological aspects of the microconstituents is discussed based on the kinetics of carbon redistribution between martensite and austenite upon partitioning conditions of 400 °C and 50 s. Under fixed quenching and partitioning conditions, decreasing the PAGS leads to a more efficient carbon partitioning process through the smaller and more homogeneously distributed phases developed during the first quench. In contrast, the microstructural heterogeneity obtained with larger PAGSs makes it more difficult to control the degree of carbon enrichment in austenite during partitioning and thus the austenite stability. Additionally, large volumes of fresh martensite are more likely to form in the interior of large-scale austenite grains due to the incomplete carbon homogenisation process. To consider the PAGS in the design of Q&P microstructures the selection of an optimum fraction of primary martensite is proposed, which ensures the minimisation of fresh martensite in the final microstructure and the sufficient stabilisation of the austenite phase. This new methodology facilitates the applicability of the Q&P process providing a controlled and reproducible development of optimised Q&P microstructures.
There is sufficient experimental evidence to propose that the formation kinetics of athermal martensite directly depends on the austenite grain structure from which the martensite forms. Yet, this dependence is frequently ignored. The present study investigates the role of the prior austenite grain size (PAGS) in the martensitic transformation in low-carbon steels. The transformation kinetics was experimentally studied for PAGS in the range from 6 to 185 μm and theoretically analysed based on the nucleation rate and the thermodynamic balance between the chemical driving force and the resistance exerted by the austenite against the progress of the transformation. It is observed that grain refinement shifts the martensite start temperature (MS) to lower values and accelerates the transformation rate at initial stages. At a later stage, when approximately 30% martensite has formed, the transformation rate decreases rapidly for small PAGS, whereas higher rates are maintained in coarse-grained microstructures. The change in martensite formation rate with the grain size depends on the nuclei density and on the austenite strength. This research enables an optimised selection of processing parameters for the design of ultra-high strength steels that require the formation of a controlled fraction of martensite.
This work focuses on the effect of soaking time on the microstructure during ultrafast heat treatment of a 50% cold rolled low carbon steel with initial ferritic-pearlitic microstructure. Dilatometry analysis was used to estimate the effect of heating rate on the phase transformation temperatures and to select an appropriate inter-critical temperature for final heat treatments. A thorough qualitative and quantitative microstructural characterization of the heat treated samples is performed using a wide range of characterization techniques. A complex multiphase, hierarchical microstructure consisting of ferritic matrix with embedded martensite and retained austenite is formed after all applied heat treatments. In turn, the ferritic matrix contains recrystallized and non-recrystallized grains. It is demonstrated that the ultrafast heating generally results in finer microstructure compared to the conventional heating independently on the soaking time. There is a significant effect of the soaking time on the volume fraction of martensite of the ultrafast heated material, while in the samples heated with conventional heating rate it remains relatively unchanged during soaking. Recrystallization, recovery and phase transformations occurring during soaking are discussed with respect to the applied heating rate.
Medium-Mn Quenching & Partitioning (Q&P) steels have been recently considered as potential candidates for the 3rd generation advanced high-strength steels. The processing of these steels aims to induce the partitioning of substitutional alloying elements from martensite to austenite during an isothermal treatment at high temperature, where the diffusivity of substitutional alloying elements is sufficiently high. In this way, austenite increases its concentration of austenite-stabilising elements and thus its thermal stability. The present study aims to investigate the microstructural evolution during high temperature partitioning treatments in a medium-Mn steel and the possible occurrence of additional phase transformations that may compete with the process of atomic partitioning between martensite and austenite. Q&P routes in which the partitioning steps take place in the range of 400 °C–600 °C for times up to 3600 s were investigated. The final microstructures display an increased fraction of retained austenite with increasing holding times during partitioning at 400 °C, while at higher partitioning temperatures, 450 °C–600 °C, leads to cementite precipitation in austenite films and pearlite formation in blocky austenite, resulting in a decrease of the fraction of retained austenite with the holding time. This observation is supported with theoretical calculations of the volume change, suggesting that for maximising the fraction of retained austenite, short holding times are preferred during partitioning at high temperatures. Observations from the current study reveal that the successful application of high-temperature partitioning treatments in medium-Mn steels requires microstructure design strategies to minimize or suppress competitive reactions.
A medium-Mn steel, exhibiting manganese macrosegregation, was investigated. In order to study how the microstructure development influences the fracture mechanisms, the steel was quenching and partitioning processed using two different partitioning temperatures. At 400 °C partitioning temperature, the microstructure exhibits intergranular fracture at low plastic strain, following Mn-rich regions in which fresh martensite predominates. Elongated thin precipitates at prior austenite grain boundaries facilitate the initiation and progress of cracks at these locations. After partitioning at 500 °C, the redistribution of carbon triggers the formation of pearlite, the precipitation of carbides in the carbon-enriched austenite and the formation of spheroidal carbides at prior austenite grain boundaries. All these microstructural features result in an interlath fracture with more ductile character than after partitioning at 400 °C. In both cases, manganese macrosegregation triggers brittle fracture mechanisms by creating large hardness gradients.
This study unravels the microstructural mechanisms controlling the mechanical behaviour and austenite mechanical stability in ultrafine grained austenite/martensite (α′/γ) microstructures, created varying the austenitisation heating rate (0.1–10 °C/s) and temperature within the start-finish austenite formation temperatures (AS − AF) in a cold-rolled semi-austenitic stainless steel. A wide spectrum of strength-ductility combinations; i.e. strengths of 900–2100 MPa and elongations up to 25%, were characterised by sub-size tensile testing. The nanoprecipitation of Ni3(Ti,Al) in martensite during heating to low austenitisation temperatures rises the strength, while the martensite recovery, enhanced at low heating rates, improves the work-hardening. The high strength of martensite partially suppresses the formation of mechanically-induced martensite during loading, which is enabled with the increase of austenite volume fraction and contributes positively to the work-hardening. The heating rate barely affects the mechanical properties of microstructures austenitised close to AF. The austenite ultrafine grain size controls the yield strength, while the decrease in austenite mechanical stability and the α′/γ composite effect increase remarkably the work-hardening with respect to dual (α′/γ) microstructures with larger martensite volume fractions and fully austenitised microstructures. These results will enable the design of microstructures with controlled mechanical behaviour for a wider spread use of similar steel grades.
An inductive sensor developed by Philips ATC has been used to study in-situ the austenite (γ) to martensite (α′) phase transformation kinetics during tensile testing in an AISI 301 austenitic stainless steel. A correlation between the sensor output signal and the volume fraction of α′-martensite has been found by comparing the results to the ex-situ characterization by magnetization measurements, light optical microscopy, and X-ray diffraction. The sensor has allowed for the observation of the stepwise transformation behavior, a not-well-understood phenomena that takes place in large regions of the bulk material and that so far had only been observed by synchrotron X-ray diffraction.