Abstract

Work-rolls manufactured through the Indefinite Chill Double Poured (ICDP) method present an exterior work layer manufactured in a martensitic white cast iron alloyed with 4.5 %Ni, 1.7 %Cr, and 0.7 %Nb (wt.%). In its microstructure, there are abundant carbides of the type M3C and MC, which give high resistance to wear, and graphite particles which improve the service behaviour of the rolls against thermal cycling. The core of the rolls is manufactured in grey cast iron of pearlitic matrix and spheroidal graphite. These work-rolls are used in the finishing stands in Hot Strip Mills for rolling slabs proceeding from continuous casting at 1200 °C. Through the application of a Design of Experiments (DoE), an attempt has been made to identify those manufacturing factors which have a significant effect on resistance to wear of these rolls and to find an optimal combination of levels of these factors which allow for improvement in resistance to wear. To increase resistance to wear, it is recommended to situate, simultaneously, the liquidus temperature and the percentage of Si in the respective ranges of 1250–1255 °C and 1.1–1.15 (wt.%). Higher liquidus temperatures favour the presence of the pro-eutectic constituent rather than the eutectic constituent. The outer zone of the work layer, in contact with the metal sheet, which is being rolled, does not show the graphitising effect of Si (0.8–1.15 wt.%). On the contrary, it confirms the hardening effect of the Si in solid solution of the ferrite. The addition of 0.02% of Mg (wt.%) and the inoculation of 6 kg/T of FeB tend to eliminate the graphitising effect of the Si, thus favouring that the undissolved carbon in the austenite is found to form carbides in contrast to the majority formation of graphite.

Highlights

  • Accepted: 19 November 2021The work-rolls manufactured with the Indefinite Chill Double Poured (ICDP) method are used in the last two finishing stands of the hot strip mills (HSMs)

  • Work rolls manufactured through the process Indefinite Chill Double Poured (ICDP)

  • Present an exterior work layer manufactured in a martensitic white cast iron alloyed with

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Summary

Introduction

The work-rolls manufactured with the Indefinite Chill Double Poured (ICDP) method are used in the last two finishing stands of the hot strip mills (HSMs). The part of the core intended to achieve an optimal bo well as its resistance to thermal and mechanical cycles [3,5,6] These rolls are manufactured with the shell is cast.casting. Cr (1.7–18 improve resistance to wear, Nb (0.7 wt.%) a particles, and the core is a grey cast iron with a pearlitic matrix and spheroidal graphite. The presence eutectic is formed by austenite and carbides, and, on the other hand, that which is formed graphite increases resistance to thermal shock. It was concluded that inoculation with SiCaMn, apart from increasing the volume fraction of graphite and its nodularity, produced fractioning in the continuity of the carbide network, which favours an improvement in the toughness performance of the work layer [23,28]. The impact energy, obtained by means of an unnotched Charpy test, is just 3–4 J/cm2 [28]

Materials and Methods
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Results and Discussion
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