Abstract
Analysis is given of phase and structural transformations occurring upon ultrarapid laser heating in steels with different initial structures, namely, after annealing, after preliminary quenching, quenching and tempering, and after quenching with subsequent deformation and tempering. It is shown that a significant suppression of diffusion processes occurs during laser heating; this circumstance substantially affects the nature of the phase and structural transformations proceeding during laser processing. Special attention is given to studying the process of recrystallization and to the phenomenon of structural heredity during laser heating. The process of recrystallization during laser heating is considered as consisting of two stages, namely, an ordered lattice rearrangement (α-γ transformation) and the recrystallization of austenite that suffered phase-transformation-induced hardening (“phase naklep”). The effect of tempering and plastic deformation on the recrystallization of a preliminarily quenched steel consists in the intensification of the second stage, i.e., of the recrystallization of the transformation-hardened austenite. It is shown that the α-γ transformation during the laser heating of steels with the initial structure of lath martensite occurs by the “mechanism of recovery,” i.e., via the formation and growth of austenite nuclei. In steels with the initial structure of pearlite, the nucleation of austenite during laser heating can occur by a shear martensite-like diffusionless mechanism with the observance of characteristic orientation relationships between the initial ferrite and the newly formed austenite.
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