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Effect of molybdenum on phase transformation and microstructural evolution of strip cast steels containing niobium

journal contribution
posted on 2019-01-01, 00:00 authored by Lu JiangLu Jiang, Ross MarceauRoss Marceau, Thomas DorinThomas Dorin, Peter HodgsonPeter Hodgson, N Stanford
Molybdenum (Mo) is known to have a complex effect on phase transformations and precipitation in steels manufactured by conventional casting. The present work aims to examine the effect of Mo on phase transformations in Nb-containing steels produced by strip casting. Advanced experimental techniques have been utilised to simulate the strip casting process, and the microstructural features of the rapid solidification are retained for further study. Two cooling conditions from the austenite phase field were examined, isothermal holding and continuous cooling. It was found that at high cooling rates, the addition of Mo delayed the nucleation of bainite and lowered the bainite start temperature, but did not alter the bainite growth rate. The addition of Mo was also found to result in a slower transformation rate of polygonal ferrite under both isothermal and continuous cooling conditions. Thermodynamic simulations indicated that Mo did not affect the growth velocity of the polygonal ferrite, and quantitative metallography showed the nucleation density was significantly reduced by Mo addition. For the slowest continuous cooling rate, the addition of Mo completely inhibited pearlite formation, with bainitic ferrite forming instead. This has been suggested to be the result of the suppression of pearlite nucleation, rather than inhibition of growth.

History

Journal

Journal of materials science

Volume

54

Issue

2

Pagination

1769 - 1784

Publisher

Springer

Location

Cham, Switzerland

ISSN

0022-2461

eISSN

1573-4803

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature