Abstract

A nitrogen-strengthened austenitic stainless steel was tested in uniaxial tension at room temperature (295 K) and in liquid nitrogen (76 K). A transition in ductile fracture appearance from a cup-cone fracture at room temperature to shear fracture at cryogenic temperature is observed and correlated to deformation behavior and micromechanisms (void nucleation and strain localization) of fracture. The flow stresses, fracture stresses, and strain hardening rates are all higher at liquid nitrogen temperature compared to those at room temperature, and the significant increases in plastic flow stresses are accompanied by planar deformation mechanisms. At both temperatures, primary void nucleation is observed mainly at scattered, large patches of sigma phase, and initial primary void growth is associated with tensile instability (necking) in the specimen. Postuniform elongation at 295 K leads to secondary void nucleation from small, less than 1 μm in diameter, microalloy particles, leading directly to failure; the strain required for secondary void growth and coalescence is highly localized and does not contribute to macroscopic elongation. At 76 K, uniform strain increases, total strain decreases, and strain localization into shear bands between the primary voids and the surface of the neck leads directly to failure. Secondary void nucleation, growth, and coalescence are limited to shear bands and also do not contribute to the macroscopic elongation. The observations of void nucleation are characterized in terms of a continuum analysis for the interfacial stress at voidnucleating particles. The critical interfacial stress for void nucleation at the lower temperature correlates with the increased flow properties of the matrix.

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