Abstract

Through-thickness microstructural variations and their synergistic influence on degree of sensitization in grain boundary engineering (GBE) treated 304L stainless steel was compared with solution-annealed and marginally cold-worked (~3% thickness reduction) specimens. The solution-annealed specimen has shown higher degree of sensitization due to the presence of lower fraction of Σ3 (as well as other low Σ CSL) boundaries and dominant random high-angle boundaries (RHAGBs) connectivity. However, it has shown thickness-independent sensitization behavior as grain boundary character distribution, residual strain and grain boundary network topology towards thickness direction are similar. Owing to higher residual strain, as revealed by local misorientation analysis, the cold-worked specimen showed maximum degree of sensitization (higher than solution-annealed condition) at surface. The GBE specimen has shown much lower degree of sensitization at surface due to higher-fraction of Σ3 boundaries and discontinuous RHAGBs connectivity. However, increasing fraction of RHAGBs and their connectivity, as confirmed by twinning-related domain and fractal analysis, cause more sensitization at interior of this specimen. In spite of this, the degree of sensitization at the interior of GBE specimen is lower than the solution-annealed or cold-worked specimen. Even though the residual strain in GBE specimen is higher than the solution-annealed condition, the lower degree of sensitization indicates that the grain boundary character distribution and grain boundary network topology have higher implication than residual strain in controlling sensitization.

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