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Tensile Properties and Work Hardening Behavior of...
Journal article

Tensile Properties and Work Hardening Behavior of Laser-Welded Dual-Phase Steel Joints

Abstract

The aim of this investigation was to evaluate the microstructural change after laser welding and its effect on the tensile properties and strain hardening behavior of DP600 and DP980 dual-phase steels. Laser welding led to the formation of martensite and significant hardness rise in the fusion zone because of the fast cooling, but the presence of a soft zone in the heat-affected zone was caused by partial vanishing and tempering of the pre-existing martensite. The extent of softening was much larger in the DP980-welded joints than in the DP600-welded joints. Despite the reduction in ductility, the ultimate tensile strength (UTS) remained almost unchanged, and the yield strength (YS) indeed increased stemming from the appearance of yield point phenomena after welding in the DP600 steel. The DP980-welded joints showed lower YS and UTS than the base metal owing to the appearance of severe soft zone. The YS, UTS, and strain hardening exponent increased slightly with increasing strain rate. While the base metals had multi-stage strain hardening, the welded joints showed only stage III hardening. All the welded joints failed in the soft zone, and the fracture surfaces exhibited characteristic dimple fracture.

Authors

Farabi N; Chen DL; Zhou Y

Journal

Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp. 222–230

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

February 1, 2012

DOI

10.1007/s11665-011-9865-8

ISSN

1059-9495

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