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Microstructural evolution and strain hardening of...
Journal article

Microstructural evolution and strain hardening of Fe–24Mn and Fe–30Mn alloys during tensile deformation

Abstract

High Mn steels demonstrate an exceptional combination of high strength and ductility owing to their sustained high work hardening rate during deformation. In the present work, the microstructural evolution and work hardening of Fe–30Mn and Fe–24Mn alloys during uniaxial tensile testing at 293K and 77K were investigated. The Fe–30Mn alloy did not undergo significant strain-induced phase transformations or twinning during deformation at 293K, whereas these transformations were observed during deformation at 77K. A modified Kocks–Mecking model was successfully applied to describe the strain hardening behavior of Fe–30Mn at both temperatures, and quantitatively identified the influence of stacking fault energy and strain-induced phase transformations on dynamic recovery. The Fe–24Mn alloy underwent extensive ε martensite transformation during deformation at both test temperatures. An analytical micromechanical model was successfully used to describe the work hardening of Fe–24Mn and permitted the calculation of the ε martensite stress–strain curve and tensile properties.

Authors

Liang X; McDermid JR; Bouaziz O; Wang X; Embury JD; Zurob HS

Journal

Acta Materialia, Vol. 57, No. 13, pp. 3978–3988

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

August 1, 2009

DOI

10.1016/j.actamat.2009.05.003

ISSN

1359-6454

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