Abstract
Ultra-thick duplex stainless steel welding plates are widely used in various industries. However, one of the significant concerns is the inhomogeneous microstructure and mechanical properties along the thickness, which reduces welding efficiency and degrade service performance. In this study, a 55 mm thick duplex stainless steel welding joint with an X-type weld groove was prepared to study the variation of microstructure and mechanical properties along the through-thickness direction by both the miniature tensile specimen and cross-weld tensile specimen. The correlation between the microstructure and mechanical property was also studied. The results showed that the weld metal was characterized by abundant columnar grains with decreasing austenite content from surface to mid-thickness. Besides, the total fraction of low angle grain boundaries increased more than one-fold, while the total fraction of high angle grain boundaries decreased from 48.03% to 4.52% with increasing depth to the mid-thickness. Furthermore, substantial substructured grains and recrystallized grains were dominated in the weld metal and base metal. Along the thickness direction, the mechanical strength almost decreased and the elongation of welding joint increased with the increasing distance from the surface. Microhardness had a similar trend to that of strength, which all can be attributed to the variation of austenite content and grain boundary character distribution. Along the transverse direction, weld metal had the highest strength of 597.67 MPa, followed by the heat-affected zone of 549.42 MPa and base metal of 510.20 MPa, while the trend of elongation was opposite to that of strength. The microhardness distribution was not consistent with that of strength and had a maximum at the heat-affected zone.
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