Abstract

Laser welding of 1.2 GPa-class cold-rolled quenching and partitioning steel with martensite + retained austenite microstructure was performed at different heat inputs ranging from 91–240 J·mm−1 using a CO2 laser. Scanning electron microscopy, electron backscatter diffraction, and uniaxial tensile testing equipped with digital image correlation were employed to characterize the microstructural and mechanical evolution of the joints. The results revealed that the fusion zone and upper-critical HAZ comprised full martensite with high microhardness. The HAZ contained a narrow softened zone with a minimum width of ∼0.6 µm and at least 48 HV microhardness drop because of the martensite tempering. Martensite decomposition and precipitation of carbides were noticeable at higher heat inputs, so that the hardness of the softened zone was declined. At the welding heat input of 91 J·mm−1, the yield and tensile strengths were 841 and 1270 MPa, respectively, which represented reductions of 5.5 and 0.78% compared to the base material properties. The joint efficiency of 99.2% was achieved at the lowest heat input. The tensile deformation was primarily concentrated in the softened zone and was small in the fusion zone. However, the participation of the base material to tensile deformation was enhanced at lower heat inputs, leading to higher elongation values up to ∼11.9% during tensile testing.

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