Detail View

Investigations of the microstructure evolution and tensile deformation behavior of austenitic Fe-Mn-Al-C lightweight steels and the effect of Mo addition
Citations

WEB OF SCIENCE

Citations

SCOPUS

Metadata Downloads

Title
Investigations of the microstructure evolution and tensile deformation behavior of austenitic Fe-Mn-Al-C lightweight steels and the effect of Mo addition
Issued Date
2018-04
Citation
Moon, Joonoh. (2018-04). Investigations of the microstructure evolution and tensile deformation behavior of austenitic Fe-Mn-Al-C lightweight steels and the effect of Mo addition. doi: 10.1016/j.actamat.2018.01.051
Type
Article
Article Type
Article
Author Keywords
Lightweight steelPrecipitationAtom Probe Tomography (APT)First-principles calculationsNanoindentationDeformation microstructure
Keywords
KAPPA-CARBIDE PRECIPITATIONHIGH-STRENGTHLOW-DENSITYORIENTATION RELATIONSHIPSM6C CARBIDEALLOYPARTICLESI
ISSN
1359-6454
Abstract
A series of Fe-30 wt%Mn-10.5 wt%Al-1.1 wt%C steels with Mo addition from 0 to 5 wt% were prepared to investigate the effect of Mo on the microstructure and tensile deformation behavior of austenitic lightweight steel. When the Mo content was below 4 wt%, the microstructure of solution-treated samples consisted of austenite and kappa-carbide, while Mo-enriched M6C and M23C6 carbides were additionally precipitated in samples containing Mo more than 4 wt% during a solution treatment at 1050 degrees C. These carbides inhibited austenite grain growth during the solution treatment, resulting in significant grain refinement in the samples containing more that 4 wt% of Mo. Tensile test results showed that the yield strength gradually decreased with an increase in the Mo content up to 3 wt% due to the suppression of kappa-carbide precipitation, whereas it significantly increased when the Mo content exceeded 4 wt% due to grain refinement and precipitation strengthening caused by Mo-enriched carbides. During the tensile deformation, the strain hardening rates of all alloys increased and then the deformation mode subsequently changed with an increase in the Mo content from shearband-induced plasticity (SIP) to microband-induced plasticity (MBIP). Finally, the change in the kappa-carbide precipitation behavior upon the addition of Mo and its effect on the deformation behavior were carefully analyzed and discussed through nanoindentation experiments, first-principles calculations and atom probe tomography analyses. (C) 2018 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11750/9909
DOI
10.1016/j.actamat.2018.01.051
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Show Full Item Record

File Downloads

  • There are no files associated with this item.

공유

qrcode
공유하기

Total Views & Downloads