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Effects of Si on microstructural evolution and mechanical properties of hot-rolled ferrite and bainite dual-phase steels

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journal contribution
posted on 2011-01-01, 00:00 authored by Minghui Cai, H Ding, Y K Lee, Z Y Tang, J S Zhang
Based on the thermo-mechanical controlled process, the effects of Si on microstructural evolution, tensile properties, impact toughness, and stretch-flangeability of ferrite and bainite dual-phase (FBDP) steels were systematically investigated. The addition of Si from 0 to 0.95% promoted the formation of fine and equiaxed ferrite grains, and high Si (0.95%) also resulted in the formation of blocky martensite islands and retained austenite. Yield and tensile strengths, and uniform and total elongations all increased with increasing Si content. Therefore, the tensile strength and ductility balance was improved by Si addition due to the increasing strain-hardening rate. The fractured morphologies after hole-expansion showed that the excellent stretch-flangeability of FBDP steels was associated with the micro-cracks propagating through in ferrite phase as well as the elongated ferrite grains along the direction perpendicular to the crack. 0.95% Si steel had a similar high combination of tensile strength and impact toughness to 0.55% Si steel, and especially 0.95% Si steel exhibited an excellent combination of tensile strength and stretch-flangeability.

History

Journal

ISIJ International

Volume

51

Pagination

476 - 481

Location

Tokyo, Japan

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

0915-1559

eISSN

1347-5460

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2011, ISIJ

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