4.5 Article

Temperature Effects on Tensile Deformation Behavior of a Medium Manganese TRIP Steel and a Quenched and Partitioned Steel

Journal

METALS
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/met11020375

Keywords

medium manganese TRIP steel; quenched and partitioned (Q& P) steel; tensile mechanical behavior; strain-induced austenite-to-martensite transformation

Funding

  1. Advanced Steel Processing and Products Research Center at Colorado School of Mines
  2. National Science Foundation through CAREER Award [0955236]
  3. Division Of Materials Research
  4. Direct For Mathematical & Physical Scien [0955236] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Research compared the effect of temperature on austenite stability and tensile mechanical properties of two types of high-strength steels, showing that the impact of temperature increase varies for the two steels.
Third-generation advanced high-strength steels (AHSS) containing metastable retained austenite are being developed for the structural components of vehicles to reduce vehicle weight and improve crash performance. The goal of this work was to compare the effect of temperature on austenite stability and tensile mechanical properties of two steels, a quenched and partitioned (Q&P) steel with a martensite and retained austenite microstructure, and a medium manganese transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) steel with a ferrite and retained austenite microstructure. Quasi-static tensile tests were performed at temperatures between -10 and 85 degrees C for the Q&P steel (0.28C-2.56Mn-1.56Si in wt.%), and between -10 and 115 degrees C for the medium manganese TRIP steel (0.14C-7.14Mn-0.23Si in wt.%). X-ray diffraction measurements as a function of strain were performed from interrupted tensile tests at all test temperatures. For the medium manganese TRIP steel, austenite stability increased significantly, serrated flow behavior changed, and tensile strength and elongation changed significantly with increasing temperature. For the Q&P steel, flow stress was mostly insensitive to temperature, uniform elongation decreased with increasing temperature, and austenite stability increased with increasing temperature. The Olson-Cohen model for the austenite-to-martensite transformation as a function of strain showed good agreement for the medium manganese TRIP steel data and fit most of the Q&P steel data above 1% strain.

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