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Steels, Microstructure and Properties

TLDR
In this article, the authors studied the effects of alloying elements in iron-carbon alloys and the formation of martensite, bainite reaction and acicular ferrite reaction.
Abstract
Iron and its interstitial solid solutions * The strengthening of iron and its alloys * The iron-carbon equilibrium diagram and plain carbon steels * The effects of alloying elements in iron-carbon alloys * Formation of martensite * The bainite reaction * Acicular ferrite * The heat treatment of steels - hardenability * The tempering of martensite * Commercial Steels: New material to include Nanostructured Steels, Steels for the Energy and Automobile Industries * The embrittlement and fracture of steels * Stainless steel * Weld microstructures * Modelling of microstructure and properties *

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Structure and properties of a low carbon Cu bearing high strength steel

TL;DR: In this article, a low carbon steel alloyed with Ni, Mn, Mo, Cu and microalloyed with Nb and Ti was prepared and the continuous cooling transformation behavior of the steel was evaluated.
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Mixed diffusion-controlled growth of pearlite in binary steel

TL;DR: In this paper, a kinetic theory for the diffusion-controlled growth of pearlite is presented, which accounts simultaneously for diffusion through the austenite and via the transformation front, without the need for mechanical equilibrium at the phase junctions.
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Elevated Temperature Mechanical Behavior of Severely Deformed Titanium

TL;DR: In this paper, the deformation behavior and flow stress model of commercial purity (CP) titanium after severe plastic deformation (SPD) was investigated at a compression test at a strain rate of 0.001-0.1 s−1 in the range of 600-900 °C.
Journal ArticleDOI

Estimation of microstructural compositions in the weld zone of structural steel using nanoindentation

TL;DR: In this paper, nanoindentation was performed on three different locations of the weld zone, including base metal (BM), heat-affected zone (HAZ) and weld metal (WM).
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A thermodynamic model for carbon trapping in lattice defects

TL;DR: In this paper, a model in the framework of the CALPHAD method is proposed to describe the distribution of interstitial solute (carbon) atoms in bcc-iron during tempering of martensite.