Abstract

Fatigue loading induced microstructure evolution featured by Fine Granular Area (FGA) in high-strength martensitic steels have close ties to the fatigue crack initiation and early growth, which are worthy of being investigated. On this issue, we conducted Very High Cycle Fatigue (VHCF), High Cycle Fatigue (HCF) and Low Cycle Fatigue (LCF) tests on three different types of specimens. Combined with post-mortem/quasi in-situ Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM) and Electron Back-Scattered Diffraction (EBSD) observations, as well as further Transmission Kikuchi Diffraction (TKD) and Transmission Electron Microscope (TEM) analyses, we captured two different types of microstructure evolution behaviors during the fatigue loading. One is the “dynamic precipitation”, a kind of phase transformation from martensitic matrix (BCC) to Nb- and Mo-rich small carbides (MC, M7C3) accelerated by repeated slight plastic deformation, whose formation does not rely on the stress concentration effect and also has no ties to the plastic strain localization and fatigue crack initiation. Another is the “local grain refinement” around those stress singularities (crack tip, or interior inclusion) generating substantial amounts of fine sub-grains in VHCF, HCF and LCF regimes, which can then promote fatigue crack initiation and early growth along sub-grain boundaries, fine/coarse grain boundaries and martensitic packet boundaries.

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