Abstract

The effect of annealing on the evolution of an ultrafine-grain structure and carbides in a 06MBF steel (Fe–0.1Mo–0.6Mn–0.8Cr–0.2Ni–0.3Si–0.2Cu–0.1V–0.03Ti–0.06Nb–0.09C, wt %) has been studied. The grain–subgrain structure (d = 102 ± 55 nm) formed by high-pressure torsion and stabilized by dispersed (MC, M3C, d = 3–4 nm) and relatively coarse carbides (M3C, d = 15–20 nm) is stable up to a temperature of 500°C (1 h) (d = 112 ± 64 nm). Annealing at a temperature of 500°C is accompanied by the formation in regions with a subgrain structure of recrystallized grains, the size of which is close to the size of subgrains formed by high-pressure torsion. The average size and distribution of dispersed particles change weakly. The precipitation hardening and the increase in the fraction of high-angle boundaries in the structure cause an increase in the values of the microhardness to 6.4 ± 0.2 GPa after annealing at 500°C as compared to the deformed state (6.0 ± 0.1 GPa). After 1-h annealing at 600 and 700°C, the microcrystal size (d = 390 ± 270 nm and 1.7 ± 0.7 μm, respectively) increases; the coarse M3C (≈ 50 nm) and dispersed carbides grow by 5 and 8 nm, respectively. The value of the activation energy for grain growth Q = 516 ± 31 kJ/mol upon annealing of the ultrafine-grained steel 06MBF produced by high-pressure torsion exceeds the values determined in the 06MBF steel with a submicrocrystalline structure formed by equal-channel angular pressing and in the nanocrystalline α iron.

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