Abstract

This study presents the results of research, the aim of which was to analyze the uniformity of the distribution of selected mechanical properties along the length of a 5.5 mm diameter wire rod of 20MnB4 steel for specific thermoplastic processing parameters. The scope of the study included, inter alia, metallographic analyses, microhardness tests, thermovision investigations, and tests of the wire rod mechanical properties (yield strength, ultimate tensile strength, elongation, relative reduction in area at fracture), along with their statistical analysis, for three technological variants of the rolling process differing by rolling temperature in the final stage of the rolling process (Reducing Sizing Mill rolling block [RSM]) and by cooling rate using STELMOR® cooling process. The obtained results led to the conclusion that the analyzed rolling process is characterized by a certain disparity of the analyzed mechanical properties along the length of the wire rod, which, however, retains a certain stability. This disparateness is caused by a number of factors. One of them, which ultimately determines the properties of the finished wire rod, is the process of controlled cooling in the STELMOR® line. Despite technological advances concerning technical solutions (among them, increasing the roller track speed in particular sections), it is currently not possible to completely eliminate the temperature difference along the length of the wire rod caused by the contact of individual coils with each other. From this point of view, for the analyzed thermoplastic processing parameters, there is no significant impact by the production process parameters on the quality of the finished steel product. Whereas, while comparing the mechanical properties and microstructure of the wire rod produced in the different technological combinations, it was found that the wire rod rolled in an RSM block at 850 °C and cooled after the rolling process on a roller conveyor at 10 °C/s had the best set of mechanical properties and the smallest microstructure variations. The wire rod produced in this way had the required level of plasticity reserve, which enables further deformation of the given type of steel in compression tests with a relative plastic strain of 75%. The uniformity of mechanical properties along the length of wire rods designed for further cold plastic working processes is an important problem. This is an important issue, given that wire rods made from 20MnB4 steel are an input material for further cold plastic working processes, e.g., for the drawing processes or the production of nails.

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