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Solidification Cracking Susceptibility of Stainless Steels: New Test and Explanation

Kun Liu, +2 more
- 01 Oct 2020 - 
- Vol. 99, Iss: 10
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TLDR
In this paper, the susceptibility of austenitic, ferritic, and duplex stainless steels to solidification cracking was evaluated by the Transverse Motion Weldability (TMW) test.
Abstract
The susceptibility of austenitic, ferritic, and duplex stain-less steels to solidification cracking was evaluated by the new Transverse Motion Weldability (TMW) test. The focus was on austenitic stainless steels. 304L and 316L were least susceptible, 321 was significantly more susceptible, and 310 was much more susceptible. However, some 321 welds were even less susceptible than 304L welds. These 321 welds were found to have much finer grains to better resist solidification cracking. Quenching 321 during welding revealed spontaneous grain refining could occur by heterogeneous nucleation. For 304L, 316L, and 310, a new explanation for the susceptibility was proposed based on the continuity of the liquid between columnar dendrites; a discontinuous, isolated liquid allows bonding between dendrites to occur early to better resist cracking. In 304L and 316L, the dendrite-boundary liquid was discontinuous and isolated, as revealed by quenching. The liquid was likely depleted by both fast back diffusion into -dendrites (body-centered cubic) and the L +  + reaction, which consumed L while forming . In 310, however, the dendrites were separated by a continuous liquid that prevented early bonding between them. Back diffusion into -dendrites (face-centered cubic) was much slower, and the L +  + reaction formed little . Quenching also revealed skeletal/lacy formed in 304L and 316L well after solidification ended; thus, skeletal/lacy did not resist solidification cracking, as had been widely believed for decades. The TMW test further demonstrated that both more sulfur and slower welding can increase susceptibility.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Calculating the Susceptibility of Carbon Steels to Solidification Cracking During Welding

TL;DR: In this article, the effect of the C content on the susceptibility of binary Fe-C alloys was assumed as an approximation in view of the rapid diffusion of the interstitial solute C in Fe.
Journal ArticleDOI

Solidification cracking susceptibility associated with a teardrop-shaped weld pool

TL;DR: For straight columnar dendritic grains growing side by side, |dT/d(fS)1/2| near their roots can be the crack-susceptibility index as verified against welds made as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Effect of sulfur, phosphorus, silicon, and delta ferrite on weld solidification cracking of AISI 310S austenitic stainless steel

TL;DR: In this paper , the authors highlight the importance of controlling S, P, Si, and δ-ferrite on the susceptibility of AISI 310S to solidification cracking.
References
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Welding Metallurgy and Weldability of Stainless Steels

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce phase diagrams and constitution diagrams for welding of stainless steel welds, as well as a Weldability Testing Appendix 1: Nominal Compositions of Stainless Steels Appendix 2: Etching Techniques for Stainless Steel Welds Author Index Subject Index
Journal ArticleDOI

Microstructural development during solidification of stainless steel alloys

TL;DR: In this article, the influence of cooling rate on the microstructure of stainless steel alloys was investigated and the conditions that lead to the many microstructural morphologies that develop during solidification.
Journal ArticleDOI

A criterion for cracking during solidification

TL;DR: In this article, an index for the susceptibility of an alloy to cracking during solidification was also proposed, that is, |dT/d(fS1/2)| near (fS) 1/2 ǫ = 1, where T is temperature and fS the fraction solid in the semisolid.
Journal Article

WRC-1992 constitution diagram for stainless steel weld metals : a modification of the WRC-1988 diagram

D. J. Kotecki, +1 more
- 01 Jan 1992 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, a modification of the Welding Research Council 1988 diagram (WRC-1 988 diagram) is proposed to increase the scope and accuracy of Ferrite Number (FN) prediction in stainless steel weld metal and related dissimilar metal joints.
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