Abstract

Single-pass isothermal hot compression tests on four medium-Mn steels with different C and Al contents were conducted using a Gleeble-3500 thermal simulation machine at varying deformation temperatures (900-1150 °C) and strain rates (0.01-5 s-1). Based on friction correction theory, the friction of the test stress-strain data was corrected. On this basis, the Arrhenius constitutive model of experimental steels considering Al content and strain compensation and hot processing maps of different experimental steels at a strain of 0.9 were established. Moreover, the effects of C and Al contents on constitutive model parameters and hot processing performance were analyzed. The results revealed that the increase in C content changed the trend of the thermal deformation activation energy Q with the true strain. The Q value of 2C7Mn3Al increased by about 50 KJ/mol compared with 7Mn3Al at a true strain greater than 0.4. In contrast, increasing the Al content from 0 to 1.14 wt.% decreased the activation energy of thermal deformation in the true strain range of 0.4-0.9. Continuing to increase to 3.30 wt.% increased the Q of 7Mn3Al over 7Mn by about 65 KJ/mol over the full strain range. In comparison, 7Mn1Al exhibited the best hot processing performance under the deformation temperature of 975-1125 °C and strain rate of 0.2-5 s-1. This is due to the addition of C element reduces the δ-ferrite volume fraction, which leads to the precipitation of κ-carbides and causes the formation of microcracks; an increase in Al content from 0 to 1.14 wt.% reduces the austenite stability and improves the hot workability, but a continued increase in the content up to 3.30 wt.% results in the emergence of δ-ferrite in the microstructure, which slows down the austenite DRX and not conducive to the hot processing performance.

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