Abstract

Vacuum electron beam welding was adopted for the reduced activation ferritic martensitic steel (CLF-1 steel) with a thickness of 32 mm, and a well-formed butt joint without metallurgical defects was obtained under the optimum technological parameters. After welding, the specimens were subjected to high temperature tempering (710 °C/120 min/AC (air cooling), abbreviation HTT) and incomplete annealing (840 °C/120 min/AC, abbreviation IA) heat treatment, and the microstructure and mechanical properties of the as-welded state and two different heat treatment states were compared. The results showed that the as-welded weld metal (WM) was composed of coarse lath martensite, and the heat affected zone (HAZ) was composed of a large amount of massive martensite and dispersed fine MX and M23C6. Compared with the welded state, the martensite structure of HTT state WM and HAZ were refined, nano-scale M23C6 was precipitated along the boundary of tempered martensite in WM and nano-scale MX was precipitated in tempered martensite lath structure, both of which played a role of dispersion strengthening. Compared with the HTT state, the martensite structure of the WM and HAZ in the IA state became coarser, and both M23C6 and MX tend to grow together. The fracture position of the tensile specimens of as-welded state, HTT state and IA state welded joints were all located on the base metal (BM), and the tensile strength decreased successively, while the yield strength and elongation increased successively. The average impact absorbed energy of the BM, as-welded state, HTT state and IA state welds were 236 J, 42 J, 241 J and 51 J, respectively. The impact performance of HTT state welds surpassed the BM.

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