Abstract

Pipeline steel is a special type of steel used for transporting, for example, oil and natural gas. This study focuses on X80-grade pipeline steel modified with the addition of Nb and Nb-V at different cooling rates (air cooling or quenching) after hot rolling and subjecting it to quenching and tempering heat treatment. Based on multiscale characterization techniques, the effects of microalloying and the cooling rate after hot rolling on the microstructure, precipitation behavior, and strengthening mechanisms were studied. The results showed that the strengths of quenched steels were higher than those of air-cooled steels, and the increase in strength was more pronounced with the addition of Nb-V than with the addition of Nb alone in the steels. Under the same cooling condition, the strengths of Nb-V-added steels were larger than those of Nb-added steels. Additionally, the Nb-V addition promotes the formation of lath structures. The yield stress of the steels, calculated by using measured microstructural parameters following the linear addition of strengthening, is in good agreement with the measured values.

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