Abstract
Ausforming is the process by which austenite is plastically deformed prior to bainitic or martensitic transformation. The advantages of such a process on the kinetics of the bainitic transformations have already been reported, but little is found about the effect on the morphology and crystallography of the final microstructure, and in most cases the studies deal with high C steels. Since ausforming has been suggested to be an alternative to transfer the concept of nanostructured bainite to medium carbon contents, the necessity to study the effect of prior plastic deformation on the subsequent bainitic transformation in those steels arises. By means of techniques such as high-resolution dilatometry, scanning electron microscopy, electron backscatter diffraction and X-Ray diffraction, it has been proven that, in a medium carbon steel (0.4 wt%), the macroscopic isotropy that characterizes the bainitic transformation can be altered, under certain conditions, by plastically deforming austenite prior to transformation. The alteration is such that, at low temperatures, the interpretation of the dilatometric response or the plate thickness measurements can be hindered. In addition, the final microstructure is also affected, presenting highly ordered bainitic ferrite plates, most of them correspondent to specific crystallographic variants.
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