Continuous Cooling Transformation Behavior Of An As-Rolled Dual Phase Steel With Low Carbon And Low Alloy

The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Tao Li
Organization:
The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society
Pages:
10
File Size:
2797 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2006

Abstract

The development of DP(Dual Phase) steels and TRIP(Transformation Induced Plasticity) steels has received much attention in recent years due to their high strength and simultaneous good ductility, which provides the potential for weight reduce and resource savings on certain components in automobile or other industries. So a controlled rolling process was simulated in the present study by thermomechanical simulator (Gleeble 1500) for producing DP steels on a kind of low carbon steel containing a small amount of Si and Cr. F+M dual phase microstructures have been obtained during continuous cooling processes of a wide cooling rate range from 10°C /s to 60°C /s. The grain size of the dual phase steel developed can be refined to less than 5 m through the mechanism of deformation induced ferrite (DIF) transformation. The ultrafine ferritic grains are equiaxed with high-angle boundary, and the martensite islands of an average size less than 5m disperse uniformly in the ferrite matrix. The ultrafine martensite islands not only inhibit the growth of ultrafine ferritic grains and improve the bonding of F/M interface, but also increase remarkably the strain hardening rate in the processing of the present Dual-Phase steel. As a result, the tensile strength of ultrafine grained Dual-Phase steel reaches higher than 1000 MPa. The result shows that an ultrafine grained Dual-Phase steel of low carbon and low alloy is promised to exhibit desired F+M microstructure by means of this new TMCP process.
Citation

APA: Tao Li  (2006)  Continuous Cooling Transformation Behavior Of An As-Rolled Dual Phase Steel With Low Carbon And Low Alloy

MLA: Tao Li Continuous Cooling Transformation Behavior Of An As-Rolled Dual Phase Steel With Low Carbon And Low Alloy. The Minerals, Metals and Materials Society, 2006.

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