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The formation of ultrafine ferrite through static transformation in low carbon steels

journal contribution
posted on 2008-01-01, 00:00 authored by Y Adachi, M Wakita, Hossein BeladiHossein Beladi, Peter HodgsonPeter Hodgson
A novel approach was used to produce an ultrafine grain structure in low carbon steels with a wide range of hardenability. This included warm deformation of supercooled austenite followed by reheating in the austenite region and cooling (RHA). The ultrafine ferrite structure was independent of steel composition. However, the mechanism of ferrite refinement changed with the steel quench hardenability. In a relatively low hardenable steel, the ultrafine structure was produced through dynamic strain induced transformation, whereas the ferrite refinement was formed by static transformation in steels with high quench hardenability. The use of a model Ni-30Fe austenitic alloy revealed that the deformation temperature has a strong effect on the nature of the intragranular defects. There was a transition temperature below which the cell dislocation structure changed to laminar microbands. It appears that the extreme refinement of ferrite is due to the formation of extensive high angle intragranular defects at these low deformation temperature that then act as sites for static transformation. © 2008 World Scientific Publishing Company.

History

Journal

International journal of modern physics B

Volume

22

Pagination

2804-2813

Location

Singapore

ISSN

1793-6578

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article, C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2008, World Scientific Publishing

Issue

18-19

Publisher

World Scientific Publishing

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