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Effects of load partitioning and texture on the plastic anisotropy of duplex stainless steel alloys under quasi-static loading conditions

journal contribution
posted on 2019-04-01, 00:00 authored by A Ameri, Z Quadir, Mahmud AshrafMahmud Ashraf, C Logos, J Escobedo-Diaz
The plastic anisotropies of two hot-rolled Lean Duplex Stainless Steels (commercially known as LDX 2101 and LDX 2404) were investigated by applying compressive strains, at 10 −3 s −1 rate, along the rolling- and transverse-directions (RD and TD). The microstructural changes were elucidated by Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD) as a function of strain level and loading direction. In both alloy grades, the austenite phase shows a weaker texture development than the ferrite phase; the later develops {001}<110> and {110}<110> textures in LDX 2101 and LDX 2404 alloys, respectively. Also, in both alloys, the yield stress along the TD is larger by 10% than along the RD. Anisotropies are also detected in the rate of property changes with deformations; after 30% true strain, the flow stress along the RD in LDX 2101 alloy starts exceeding the stress along the TD. Microstructural studies indicate that the load partitioning, grains shape, phase boundaries and austenite to martensite phase transformations are the origins of the anisotropic phenomena in LDX 2101 alloy, whereas the crystallographic texture of ferrite phase, phase boundaries and load partitioning are the plausible origins of plastic anisotropies in LDX 2404 alloy.

History

Journal

Materials Science and Engineering A

Volume

752

Pagination

24 - 35

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

0921-5093

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2019, Elsevier B.V.