Abstract

The use of vanadium-microalloying in ultrahigh strength dual phase (DP) steels has been shown to yield a fine dispersion of nano-scale vanadium carbonitrides (V(C,N)) in ferrite along with a pronounced grain refinement, leading to enhanced micromechanical compatibility and increased local ductility. Here we present data on microstrain partitioning and the evolution of damage in vanadium-free (V-free) Fine-Grained (FG) and vanadium-added (V-added) Ultra Fine-Grained (UFG) DP steels, each with a UTS of about 1300 MPa (DP1300), using quasi in-situ tensile tests coupled with scanning electron microscopy, followed by microscopic Digital Image Correlation (µDIC). Quantitative analysis shows that the homogenization of microstrain between ferrite and martensite is locally enhanced and the strain gradients at the ferrite/martensite (F/M) interfaces reduced in the V-added steel. This trend was also evident in the V-added steel exhibiting different states of stress obtained with unique notched microtensile specimen designs. Three different µDIC-based computational techniques were used to quantify the extent of microstrain partitioning, in order to determine the mechanistic basis for the increase in true strain to fracture with vanadium-microalloying. This work was supplemented with damage evolution studies in both V-free and V-added materials using high resolution, field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM) imaging, and X-ray computed microtomography (µXCT). These corroborate the microscopic analyses and confirm that both vanadium-microalloying and stress-state impacts the local strain gradient at ferrite/martensite (F/M) interfaces, and thereby changes the way damage is initiated and grows within the material.

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