Abstract

Tensile tests and ratcheting tests were performed on a 316LN austenitic stainless steel at 300 °C, 400 °C, 500 °C, and 600 °C, respectively, to study the influence of dynamic strain aging (DSA) on deformation behavior and microstructural evolution. The DSA temperature range in present work was determined to be ≥ 400 °C in both uniaxial tests and ratcheting tests. Especially in the ratcheting tests, a sudden drop in ratcheting strain accumulation as well as in steady ratcheting strain rate was evident when the temperature raising from 300 ° to 400 °C. While within the DSA temperature region, the ratcheting behavior was insensitive to the temperature. Microstructural examinations revealed dislocation cells and tangles in the sample ratcheted at 300 °C (free of DSA), while complex dislocation structure in the samples ratcheted at ≥ 400 °C (with DSA) that was consisted mainly by high-density dislocation walls, planar slip bands, and Lomer-Cottrell locks. This clearly indicates a change in predominant ratcheting deformation mechanism from cross-slip at DSA-free temperature region to planar-slip at DSA region. It was further demonstrated that, within the temperature range from 400 °C to 600 °C, the DSA-induced hardening effect balanced with the thermally-activated softening effect and this balance led to temperature-insensitive ratcheting behavior as experimentally observed. Finally, the DSA-affected dislocation structure was quantitatively evaluated in the ratcheted samples, with an aim in correlating to the ratcheting behavior.

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