Abstract
Binary Fe–40Al and ternary Fe–40Al–0.6C alloys were cast, hot-extruded into rods, annealed at low temperatures to reduce the non-equilibrium vacancy concentration and tested in uniaxial tension at room temperature in air, over a range of strain rates from 4.2×10 −1 s −1 to 4.2×10 −8 s −1. Yield strength, fracture strength, tensile ductility and the work-hardening behavior in the 0.2–1.0% plastic deformation range were monitored. Resulting fracture surfaces were examined at low and high magnifications, and the change in the fraction transgranular cleavage as a function of test strain rate was correlated with the observed mechanical properties. Prior to testing, both alloys exhibited fairly coarse grain size (∼80–100 μm); whereas the binary alloy was single phase, the ternary alloy contained a dispersion of lath-shaped perovskite carbides (Fe 3AlC 0.5) in the grain interior and at grain boundaries. In the binary alloy, ductility decreases continuously with decreasing strain rate and this behavior has been previously attributed to an environmental effect. For a given strain rate, over the range of strain rates examined, the ternary alloy demonstrates improved ductility over the binary alloy; furthermore, at the extremely slow strain rates (<4×10 −7 s −1), the ductility of the ternary alloy increases with decreasing strain rate after reaching a minimum. Whereas in the binary alloy, fracture mode remains completely intergranular over the entire strain rate regime, in the ternary alloy, fracture mode is completely intergranular at the fastest strain rate but gradually transitions to a predominantly transgranular cleavage mode with decreasing strain rate. A maximum in the fraction transgranular cleavage is reached coincident with the ductility minimum, beyond which (i.e. lower strain rates) the fraction transgranular cleavage decreases sharply. These observations are discussed in terms of the possible role of these carbides as hydrogen traps and their consequential effects on mechanical properties.
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