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G phase precipitation and strengthening in ultra-high strength ferritic steels: towards lean ‘maraging’ metallurgy

journal contribution
posted on 2017-05-01, 00:00 authored by W W Sun, Ross MarceauRoss Marceau, M J Styles, D Barbier, C R Hutchinson
Ultra-high strength steels are interesting materials for light-weighting applications in the transportation industries. A key requirement of these applications is weldability and consequently a low carbon content is desirable. Maraging steels are examples of ultra-high strength, low carbon steels but their disadvantage is their high cost due to the large Ni and/or Co additions required. This contribution is focussed on the development of steels with maraging-like strengths but with low solute contents (less than 10%). A series of alloy compositions were designed to exploit precipitation of the G phase in a ferritic matrix at temperatures of 450–600 °C in order to obtain yield strengths in excess of 2 GPa. The mechanical response of the materials was measured using tension and compression testing and the precipitate evolution has been characterized using atom probe tomography (APT) and in-situ small angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) at a synchrotron beamline. Precipitate number densities of 10 25 m −3 are obtained, which are amongst the highest number densities so far observed in engineering alloys. The intrinsic strength of the G phase is shown to be proportional to its size, and deviations in the chemistry of the precipitates do not significantly affect their strengthening behaviour. An important outcome is that the common temper embrittlement issues known to occur during aging of martensite in the 450–600 °C range were mitigated in one alloy by starting with a cold-rolled and partially fragmented lath martensite instead of a freshly quenched martensite.

History

Journal

Acta materialia

Volume

130

Pagination

28 - 46

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1359-6454

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2017, Acta Materialia