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Mechanism of Secondary Hardening in Rapid...
Journal article

Mechanism of Secondary Hardening in Rapid Tempering of Dual-Phase Steel

Abstract

Dual-phase steel with ferrite-martensite-bainite microstructure exhibited secondary hardening in the subcritical heat affected zone during fiber laser welding. Rapid isothermal tempering conducted in a Gleeble simulator also indicated occurrence of secondary hardening at 773 K (500 °C), as confirmed by plotting the tempered hardness against the Holloman–Jaffe parameter. Isothermally tempered specimens were characterized by analytic transmission electron microscopy and high-angle annular dark-field imaging. The cementite (Fe3C) and TiC located in the bainite phase of DP steel decomposed upon rapid tempering to form needle-shaped Mo2C (aspect ratio ranging from 10 to 25) and plate-shaped M4C3 carbides giving rise to secondary hardening. Precipitation of these thermodynamically stable and coherent carbides promoted the hardening phenomenon. However, complex carbides were only seen in the tempered bainite and were not detected in the tempered martensite. The martensite phase decomposed into ferrite and spherical Fe3C, and interlath-retained austenite decomposed into ferrite and elongated carbide.

Authors

Saha DC; Nayak SS; Biro E; Gerlich AP; Zhou Y

Journal

Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A, Vol. 45, No. 13, pp. 6153–6162

Publisher

Springer Nature

Publication Date

October 24, 2014

DOI

10.1007/s11661-014-2591-8

ISSN

1073-5623

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