The Influence of Increased Cr Content and Austenite Grain Size on the Kinetics of Phase Transformations when Cooling Hypo-Eutectoid Steel

2006 ◽  
Vol 258-260 ◽  
pp. 421-426
Author(s):  
Ignacy Wierszyłłowski

The paper presents the influence of the grain size and a little higher Cr content on the kinetics of austenite phase transformations during continuous cooling of hypo-eutectoid steel. The kinetics of austenite phase transformations during continuous cooling were determined by means of analysis of the dilatometric curves and structure investigations. The influence of the austenite grain size and the higher Cr content was analysed in two hypoeutectoid steels containing about 0.4% C. One of them had, Cr content higher, by about 1%. In both steels, the austenite grain size was changing insignificantly up to the austenitising temperature of about 950fl. Above that temperature, the austenite grain size in carbon steel grew much quicker than that in the steel with Cr addition. The austenite grain in the Cr enriched steel was smaller than that in carbon steel and, in spite of that, the duration of cooled austenite transformations were several times longer. This means that the phase transformations are much more strongly influenced by the addition of chromium slowing down carbon diffusion in austenite, than by the austenite grain size. For each phase transformation in the examined steels, the activation energy of the transformation has been determined. The activation energy of all the phase transformations varied slightly with the increase of austenitising temperature. On the basis of the obtained results, curves of true isothermal transformations have been developed for the beginning of the phase transformations in both steels, related to infinitely quick cooling down to the transformation temperature.

Materials ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 15
Author(s):  
Łukasz Poloczek ◽  
Łukasz Rauch ◽  
Marek Wilkus ◽  
Daniel Bachniak ◽  
Władysław Zalecki ◽  
...  

The paper describes physical and numerical simulations of a manufacturing process composed of hot forging and controlled cooling, which replace the conventional heat treatment technology. The objective was to investigate possibilities and limitations of the heat treatment with the use of the heat of forging. Three steels used to manufacture automotive parts were investigated. Experiments were composed of two sets of tests. The first were isothermal (TTT) and constant cooling rate (CCT) dilatometric tests, which supplied data for the identification of the numerical phase transformation model. The second was a physical simulation of the sequence forging-cooling on Gleeble 3800, which supplied data for the validation of the models. In the numerical part, a finite element (FE) thermal-mechanical code was combined with metallurgical models describing recrystallization and grain growth during forging and phase transformations during cooling. The FE model predicted distributions of the temperature and the austenite grain size in the forging, which were input data for further simulations of phase transformations during cooling. A modified JMAK equation was used to calculate the kinetics of transformation and volume fraction of microstructural constituents after cooling. Since the dilatometric tests were performed for various austenitization temperatures before cooling, it was possible to include austenite grain size as a variable in the model. An inverse algorithm developed by the authors was applied in the identification procedure. The model with optimal material parameters was used for simulations of hot forging and controlled cooling in one of the forging shops in Poland. Distributions of microstructural constituents in the forging after cooling were calculated. As a consequence, various cooling sequences during heat treatment could be analyzed and compared.


Metals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (12) ◽  
pp. 1289
Author(s):  
Cesar Facusseh ◽  
Armando Salinas ◽  
Alfredo Flores ◽  
Gerardo Altamirano

Interrupted and continuous hot compression tests were performed for eutectoid steel over the temperature range of 850 to 1050 °C and while using strain rates of 0.001, 0.01, 0.1, and 1 s−1. The interrupted tests were carried out to characterize the kinetics of static recrystallization(SRX) and determinate the interpass time conditions that are required for initiation and propagation of dynamic recrystallization (DRX), while considering that the material does not contain microalloying elements additions for the recrystallization delay. Continuous testing was used to investigate the evolution of the austenite grain size that results from DRX. The results indicate that carbon content accelerates the SRX rate. This effect was observed when the retardation of recrystallization due to a decrease in deformation temperature from 1050 to 850 °C was only about one order of magnitude. The expected decelerate effect on the SRX rate when the initial grain size increases from 86 to 387 µm was not significant for this material. Although the strain parameter has a strong influence on SRX rate, in contrast to a lesser degree of strain rate, both of the effects are nearly independent of the chemical composition. The calculated maximum interpass times that are compatible with DRCR (Dynamic Recrystallization Controlled Rolling), for relatively low strain rates, suggest that the onset and maintaining of the DRX is possible. However, while using the empirical equations that were developed in the present work to estimate the maximum times for high strain rates, such as those observed in the wire and rod mills, indicate that the DRX start is feasible, but maintaining this mechanism for 5% softening in each pass after peak strain is not possible.


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