Abstract

Effects of carbon content on cracking phenomenon, which often occurred in cold-rolled light-weight steel plates, were investigated in this study. Three steels were fabricated by varying carbon content, and their microstructures and tensile properties were investigated. The steel containing low carbon content of 0.1 wt pct consisted of thin κ-carbide bands, coarse band boundary κ-carbides, and ferrites. As the carbon content increased, volume fractions of κ-carbide bands and total κ-carbides increased, and band boundary κ-carbides were finely distributed in relatively wide band boundary areas. Microstructural observation of the deformed region of tensile specimens revealed that coarse κ-carbides continuously formed along band boundaries worked to initiate the cracking or to facilitate the abrupt crack propagation into ferrites or band boundaries in a cleavage fracture mode, while bands densely populated with fine, lamellar κ-carbides did not play a critical role in the cracking. Thus, the increase in carbon content effectively minimized the formation of band boundary carbides and reduced their size, thereby resulting in the prevention of cracking during cold rolling and in the simultaneous improvement of ductility and strength.

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