Abstract
Restrained by the strength-ductility tradeoff, it is still challenging to develop advanced high-strength low carbon low alloy (LCLA) steels with superior strength-ductility combinations and cost-effectiveness to satisfy industry demands. In this study, an innovative 2-cyclic quenching and partitioning (Q&P) heat treatment was developed to produce a novel LCLA steel with the optimized microstructure, in which a bimodal grain size distribution across various constituent phases was achieved. Tensile test results show that the 2-cyclic Q&P LCLA steel exhibits excellent mechanical properties with a uniform elongation, close to 18 %, nearly triple that of conventional Q&P LCLA steel while maintaining a tensile strength above 1 GPa. To reveal the underlying mechanisms of such exceptional strength-elongation synergy, the detailed deformation behaviors of the developed LCLA steel were characterized while the evolution of hetero-deformation-induced (HDI) stress and effective stress was investigated from the perspective of the dislocation model. It is indicated that, with increasing strain, the heterogeneous structures promote strong strain partitioning which leads to extensive geometrically necessary dislocations (GNDs) pile-ups at hetero-interface and persistently strong HDI strengthening effect, and produce the coordinated deformation among constituent phases to realize dislocation forest strengthening, collectively contributing to the enhanced work hardening capacity and hence overcoming the strength-ductility tradeoff. This study provides a new processing strategy for developing strong and ductile LCLA steels.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have