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Factors dictating the extent of low elongation in high sulfur-containing bainitic steels

Version 2 2024-07-11, 01:41
Version 1 2024-02-07, 04:15
journal contribution
posted on 2024-07-11, 01:41 authored by Baoqi DongBaoqi Dong, Tingping Hou, Peter HodgsonPeter Hodgson, Oleg Isayev, Oleksandr Hress, Serhii Yershov, Kaiming Wu
Abstract The elongation of two low temperature bainitic steels with different sulfur contents was compared under the same heat treatment. Elongations of 1.0 ± 0.5 % and 11.4 ± 1.5 % were achieved for the high- and low-S steels, respectively. A high carbon concentration and fine grain size leading to over stability of the retained austenite in the high-S steel is the main reason for the poor elongation. The differences in carbon concentration and grain size between the two steels can be attributed to pinning by MnS, where the existence of a large number of long slivers of MnS in the high-S steel was responsible for the pinning. The stability of retained austenite was also analyzed by the local tensile elongation and hardness, and the volume fraction of retained austenite that transformed to martensite during the tensile process.

History

Journal

International Journal of Materials Research

Volume

114

Pagination

1080-1087

Location

Berlin, Germany

ISSN

1862-5282

eISSN

2195-8556

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

12

Publisher

De Gruyter