Abstract

The hot ductility of as-cast Nb, Ti and Nb-Ti bearing low-carbon steels has been assessed. Hot tensile testing of in-situ melted specimens, replica examinations and thermodynamic modeling showed that addition of 0.014-0.04% Ti to 0.1 %C-0.03%Nb-0.005% N steel leads to a large volume fraction of fine strain-induced precipitates at temperatures up to 1 000°C which seriously deteriorate the hot ductility, in spite of the type of prior thermal history. Generally, three types of precipitates, i.e. coarse boundary precipitate, coarse frond-like and fine strain-induced precipitates, were found in Ti-Nb microalloyed steels with the different sizes and compositions, and the latter could be described by thermodynamic modeling. The current results are different from the previous ones published and a thermodynamic model was employed to explain this discrepancy. Accordingly, the beneficial effect of Ti can only be achieved in some instances at high nitrogen and low titanium contents, i.e. a low Ti/N ratio, which greatly encourages coarse precipitation at high temperatures and reduces the fine strain-induced precipitation. Therefore, only for electric arc steels typically with a high nitrogen level, a small addition of Ti might be considered to be advantageous to the hot ductility.

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