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Journal ArticleDOI

Development of ultrahigh strength cast-grade microalloyed steel by simple innovative heat treatment techniques for industrial applications

TLDR
In this paper, a simple and economical heat treatment method to develop ultra-high strength cast-grade micro-alloyed steel for industrial applications is proposed, where homogenized annealed samples have been subjected to typical heat treatment cycles that consisted of repeated short-duration holding at different critical temperatures followed by forced air cooling/ice-brine quenching.
Abstract
Aim of the present study is to devise simple and economical heat treatment methods to develop ultrahigh strength cast-grade microalloyed steel for industrial applications. Typical heat treatment cycles were designed on the basis of critical temperatures, Ac 3 & Ac 1 (obtained through Thermo-Calc software) and TTT/CCT curves (constructed using JMatPro software). In this work, homogenized annealed samples have been subjected to typical heat treatment cycles that consisted of repeated short-duration holding at different critical temperatures followed by forced air cooling/ice-brine quenching. The two cycles heat treatment (i.e., holding for 6 min at Ac 3 + 50 °C followed by forced air cooling + holding at intercritical zone for 20 min followed by ice-brine quenching) has resulted a significant increase in the strength with a significant amount of ductility (UTS = 1545 MPa, hardness = 446 HV, 9% elongation). This could be attributed to the development of a typical complex microstructure consisted of degenerate pearlite, fragmented cementite and finely dispersed NbC/VC in the matrix of spider network like martensite. Development of such typical microstructure has been enlightened through the analysis of divorced eutectoid transformation and diffusion controlled mechanisms. Therefore, these heat treatments techniques could be extremely useful to develop ultrahigh strength cast grade steels economically for structural/industrial applications.

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Citations
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An Analysis of Combined Cyclic Heat Treatment Performance

TL;DR: In this paper, a cyclic heat treatment was applied to steel AISI 4140 to increase yield strength and Charpy-V notch toughness in relation with structure fineness.
Journal ArticleDOI

Characteristics of multi-pass narrow-gap laser welding of D406A ultra-high strength steel

TL;DR: A universal and applicable method to predict bonding quality in narrow-gap laser beam filler wire welding of D406A ultra-high strength steel was presented in this paper, where defect-free joint could be achieved under the predicted optimal welding condition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dual-phase hetero-structured strategy to improve ductility of a low carbon martensitic steel

TL;DR: In this article , a dual-phase heterostructure was proposed to improve the mechanical properties of low carbon martensitic steel, and a promising heterostructured steel with nano-lamellar structure of soft ferrite grains completely embedded in hard martensite grains was formed in the sample annealed at 820 °C.
Journal ArticleDOI

Comparison Between Vanadium and Niobium Effects on the Mechanical Properties of Intercritically Heat Treated Microalloyed Cast Steels

TL;DR: In this article, a comparison between V and Nb-containing low carbon microalloyed cast steels has been made in terms of strength and impact energy after intercritical heat treatment (IHT).
Journal ArticleDOI

Nanoengineered Hypereutectoid Steel with Superior Hardness and Wear Resistance

Abstract: Hypereutectoid SAE 52100 steel is extensively used in bearing applications. Microstructure modification in terms of dislocation martensite and carbide refinement was achieved for SAE 52100 steel through a simple duplex heat treatment. Refinement of prior austenite grains to less than 5 μm resulted in the conversion of conventional high-carbon twinned martensite to dislocation martensite. The concurrent refinement of austenite grains and carbide precipitates was accomplished by high-temperature austenitization followed by low-temperature tempering. This resulted in nanoscale nonstoichiometric e-carbides within a heavily twinned martensitic structure. These nanoscale carbides acted as grain boundary pinning agents after their transformation to θ-carbides during the final austenitization process. The resulting microstructure was characterized by a fine dispersion of θ-carbides within dislocation martensite and showed roughly 24% increase in tensile strength and 30% better wear resistance compared to conventional structure.
References
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Book

The Physical Metallurgy of Microalloyed Steels

T. Gladman
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a substantial background to microalloyed steels with a wide selection of applications, some of which are very recent, and a well-illustrated practical guide.
Journal ArticleDOI

Using JMatPro to model materials properties and behavior

TL;DR: JMatPro as discussed by the authors is a multi-platform software program for calculating the properties and behavior of multi-component alloys, including thermophysical and physical properties, from room temperature to the liquid state.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of Pearlite Spheroidization

TL;DR: In this paper, a study of the mechanisms of pearlite spheroidization under static annealing conditions was carried out in two materials, AISI 1080 steel and pure Fe-C alloy.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of cyclic heat treatment on microstructure and mechanical properties of 0.6wt% carbon steel

TL;DR: In this article, an annealed 0.6-wt% carbon steel was subjected to cyclic heat treatment process that consisted of repeated short-duration (6min) holding at 810°C (above Ac3 temperature) followed by forced air cooling.
Journal ArticleDOI

The effect of intercritical heat treatment on the mechanical properties of AISI 3115 steel

TL;DR: In this paper, the effect of intercritical heat treatment (IHT) on the mechanical properties of AISI 3115 alloy steel was presented, where the steel was intercritically heat-treated at a temperature range of 730-830°C followed by water quenching.
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