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Low temperature aging behavior of type 308 stainless steel weld metal

TLDR
In this paper, the aging behavior of welded type 308 stainless steel was evaluated by mechanical property testing and microstructural examination, and it was concluded that both spinodal decomposition as well as G-phase formation contribute to ferrite hardening.
Abstract
The aging behavior of welded type 308 stainless steel was evaluated by mechanical property testing and microstructural examination. Aging was carried out at 475°C for up to 20,000 h. The initial material consisted of austenite with approximately 10% ferrite. Upon aging, the ferrite hardness increased up to 100%. This hardening was accompanied by a noticeable increase in the ductile—brittle transition temperature and a drop in the upper shelf energy, as measured by Charpy impact tests, and a degradation in fracture toughness, as determined by J-integral test. Tensile properties did not change significantly with aging. Microstructural analysis indicated that the ferrite decomposed spinodally into iron-rich α and chromium-enriched α′. In addition, abundant precipitation of nickel- and silicon-rich G-phase was found within the ferrite and M23C6 carbide formed along the austenite-ferrite interface. These effects are similar to the aging behavior of cast stainless steels. Occasionally, large G-phase or α precipitates were also found along the austenite-ferrite interface after aging more than 1000 h. After comparison of the mechanical property changes with the microstructural features, it was concluded that both spinodal decomposition as well as G-phase formation contribute to ferrite hardening. Spinodal decomposition results in embrittlement of the weld insofar as the ductile-brittle transition temperature is raised. G-phase formation and carbide precipitation are associated with a degradation in the ductile fracture properties, as shown by a drop in the upper shelf energy and a decrease in the fracture toughness.

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Recent developments in stainless steels

Abstract: This article presents an overview of the developments in stainless steels made since the 1990s. Some of the new applications that involve the use of stainless steel are also introduced. A brief introduction to the various classes of stainless steels, their precipitate phases and the status quo of their production around the globe is given first. The advances in a variety of subject areas that have been made recently will then be presented. These recent advances include (1) new findings on the various precipitate phases (the new J phase, new orientation relationships, new phase diagram for the Fe–Cr system, etc.); (2) new suggestions for the prevention/mitigation of the different problems and new methods for their detection/measurement and (3) new techniques for surface/bulk property enhancement (such as laser shot peening, grain boundary engineering and grain refinement). Recent developments in topics like phase prediction, stacking fault energy, superplasticity, metadynamic recrystallisation and the calculation of mechanical properties are introduced, too. In the end of this article, several new applications that involve the use of stainless steels are presented. Some of these are the use of austenitic stainless steels for signature authentication (magnetic recording), the utilisation of the cryogenic magnetic transition of the sigma phase for hot spot detection (the Sigmaplugs), the new Pt-enhanced radiopaque stainless steel (PERSS) coronary stents and stainless steel stents that may be used for magnetic drug targeting. Besides recent developments in conventional stainless steels, those in the high-nitrogen, low-Ni (or Ni-free) varieties are also introduced. These recent developments include new methods for attaining very high nitrogen contents, new guidelines for alloy design, the merits/demerits associated with high nitrogen contents, etc.
Journal ArticleDOI

Decomposition of Austenite in Austenitic Stainless Steels

TL;DR: In this article, the decomposition of austenite in austenitic stainless steels is reviewed in detail including nucleation sites and orientation relationships and the influence of several factors such as composition, previous deformation and solution annealing temperature.
Journal ArticleDOI

Atom Probe Studies of the Fe–Cr System and Stainless Steels Aged at Intermediate Temperature: A Review

TL;DR: The spinodal decomposition is known to occurr in iron-chromium-based model and industrial alloys during long-term aging at intermediate temperatures, and its evolution quantified by means of various microstructural paramaters directly accessible from concentration profiles.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microstructural Evolution in a 17-4 PH Stainless Steel after Aging at 400°C

TL;DR: The microstructure of 17-4 PH stainless steel at various stages of heat treatment, i.e., after solution heat treatment and tempering at 580 °C, and long-term aging at 400 °C have been studied by APFIM and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

Fracture toughness of type 304 and 316 stainless steels and their welds

TL;DR: In this paper, fracture toughness data for type 304 and 316 stainless steels and their welds are reviewed and the potential for component failure and when fracture mechanics assessments are required to guard against unstable fracture.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The 885° f (475° c) embrittlement of ferritic stainless steels

P. J. Grobner
TL;DR: In this paper, the embrittlement due to 885°F (475°C) exposure was caused by precipitation of a chromium-rich α' phase on dislocations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Mössbauer effect study of the 475‡C decomposition of Fe-Cr

TL;DR: In this paper, the Mossbauer effect has been applied to the decomposition of binary Fe-Cr alloys, showing that initial decomposition produces fluctuations about the average composition, consistent with expectations for spinodal decomposition.
Journal ArticleDOI

Thermodynamic analysis of solubility and miscibility gap in ferromagnetic alpha iron alloys

TL;DR: In this paper, the free energy of αFe-X solid solution is resolved into their magnetic and non-magnetic components, and the magnetic component is approximated by a modification of that of pure αFe, as has been proposed by Zener and Hillert et al.
Journal ArticleDOI

Spinodal decomposition of iron-32 at.% chromium at 470°C☆

TL;DR: The spinodal morphology is an irregular, interconnected vein-like structure characteristic of isotropic phase separation in a system in which the elastic strain attendant to the reaction is small.
Journal ArticleDOI

Embrittlement of ferritic stainless steels

TL;DR: In this article, the mechanical properties and microstructures of commercial 11 to 29 pct Cr ferritic steels were examined as functions of aging times to 1000 h at 371, 482, and 593°C.
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