Abstract

The traditional phenomenological crystallographic theory of martensitic transformations can only explain the change in the shape and crystallographic orientation of a martensitic plate within a single parent crystal. It cannot predict the detailed transformation scenario for preferred selections of martensitic variants or the contributions of partial slip/twinning to local lattice distortion, especially in polycrystalline metals/alloys that exhibit grain-to-grain interactions throughout deformation-induced phase transformation. In this work, synchrotron-based X-ray microdiffraction was used to characterize changes in the local orientation, morphology and strain distribution inside individual martensitic plates, as well as the effect of parent orientation on variant selection in bulk polycrystalline 304 stainless steel (SS) during in situ uniaxial tensile loading at the low temperature of 210K. It was directly verified that the martensitic phase transformation in the studied 304 SS has two stages, transformation first from γ to ε in the nanoscaled lamella, and then from ε to α′ in the microbands. The selection of martensitic variants was predicted well by the minimum strain work criterion. Phase transformation-induced stress relaxation was evidenced by fluctuations in the (111) plane lattice strain accompanied by a strain gradient inside the martensitic plate, indicating a load transfer from the transformed grain to its neighbor. This leads to good stress/strain accommodation, as stresses can dissipate from the matrix into martensitic plates and nearby grains. Our experimental observations and theoretical analysis provide an in-depth understanding of the micromechanical behavior, particularly phase transformation-induced plasticity enhancement, of metals containing the metastable phase.

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