Abstract

This is a study of thermal-fatigue properties in centrifugally cast high-speed steel (HSS) rolls. The thermal-fatigue mechanism was investigated, with special focus on the roll microstructure and the increase in tensile stress which led the specimens to fracture when it reached the tensile strength. The thermal-fatigue test results indicated that the thermal-fatigue life decreased with increasing maximum temperature of the thermal-fatigue cycle. The results were then interpreted based on the amount of carbides and the cyclic-softening phenomenon associated with the exposed time to elevated temperatures. The coarse intercellular carbides on the specimen surface acted as fatigue-crack initiation sites as they cleaved at a low stress level to form cracks. The roll having the lowest matrix hardness and the smallest amount of intercellular carbides, thus, showed better thermal fatigue properties than the other rolls. For the improvement of the thermal-fatigue properties of the rolls, this study suggests a homogeneous distribution of carbides by reducing the carbide segregation formed along the solidification cell boundary and by optimizing the roll compositions.

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