Abstract
Dual phase (DP) steels in which the microstructures are composed of a soft ferrite phase and a hard martensite phase are known to show good strain-hardening, high strength and large elongation, but reasons for their superior mechanical properties are still unclear. In the present study, two types of DP structures, having either networked martensite or isolated martensite were fabricated in a low-carbon steel by different heat treatment routes, and their tensile deformation behavior was analyzed using the digital image correlation (DIC) technique. It was revealed that the DP specimens having networked martensite microstructures showed a better strength-ductility balance than the DP specimens with isolated martensite structures. The microscopic DIC analysis of identical areas showed that the strain distribution within the DP microstructures was not uniform and the plastic strain was localized in soft ferrite grains. The strain localized regions tended to detour around hard martensite but eventually propagated across the martensite. It was found also from the DIC analysis that the degree of strain partitioning between ferrite and martensite in the networked DP structure was lower than that in the isolated DP structure. The deformation became more homogeneous when the hard phase (martensite) was connected to form a network structure, which could be one of the reasons for the better strength-ductility balance in the networked DP structure compared to that in the isolated DP structure.
Highlights
Demands on high strength steels have been increasing more and more in recent years, based on two different requirements from our society
The intercritical annealing temperatures shown in figure 3 were selected so as to have the volume fractions of martensite (Vm) similar to those of the dual phase (DP) structures with networked martensite shown in figure 2 (a-c)
When the starting microstructure prior to intercritical annealing was austenite, DP structures with an isolated martensite morphology were obtained. Samples fabricated with these two types of DP structures, having various volume fractions of martensite, were tensile tested at room temperature
Summary
This content was downloaded from IP address 130.54.110.32 on 08/11/2018 at 07:06 Daisuke Terada1,2, Gosuke Ikeda2, Myeong-heom Park2,3, Akinobu Shibata2,3, Nobuhiro Tsuji *2,3 Department of Advanced Materials Science and Engineering, Chiba Institute of Technology, Narashino, 275-0016, Japan
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More From: IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering
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