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1.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34092917

RESUMO

This study investigates the high strain-rate tensile properties of a cold-rolled medium-Mn steel (Fe-12Mn-3Al-0.05C % in mass fraction) designed to have a multi-phase microstructure and positive strain-rate sensitivity. At the intercritical annealing temperature of 585 °C, increasing the annealing time from 0.5 h to 8 h increased the phase volume fraction of ultrafine-grained (UFG) austenite from 2% to 35% by reversion. The remainder of the microstructure was composed of UFG ferrite and recovered α'-martensite (the latter resembles the cold-rolled state). Servo hydraulic tension testing and Kolsky-bar tension testing were used to measure the tensile properties from quasi-static strain rates to dynamic strain rates ( ε ˙ = 10 - 4 s - 1 to ε ˙ = 10 3 s - 1 ). The strain-rate sensitivities of the yield strength (YS) and ultimate tensile strength (UTS) were positive for both annealing times. Tensile properties and all non-contact imaging modalities (infrared imaging and digital image correlation) indicated an advantageous suppression of Lüders bands and Portevin Le Chatelier (PLC) bands (a critical challenge in multi-phase medium-Mn steel design) due to the unique combination of microstructural constituents and overall composition. Fracture surfaces of specimens annealed for 0.5 h showed some instances of localized cleavage fracture (approximately 30 µm wide areas and lath-like ridges). Specimens annealed for 8 h maintained a greater product of strength and elongation by at least 2.5 GPa % (on average for each strain rate). The relevant processing-structure-property relationships are discussed in the context of recommendations for design strategies concerning multi-phase steels such that homogeneous deformation behavior and positive strain-rate sensitivities can be achieved.

2.
Acta Mater ; 1772019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33304199

RESUMO

In the current work we investigate the room temperature tensile properties of a medium-Mn twinning- and transformation-induced plasticity (TWIP-TRIP) steel from quasi-static to low-dynamic strain rates ( ε ˙ = 10 - 4 s - 1 to ε ˙ = 10 2 s - 1 ). The multi-phase microstructure consists of coarse-grained recovered α' -martensite (inherited from the cold-rolled microstructure), multiple morphologies of ultrafine-grained (UFG) austenite (equiaxed, rod-like and plate-like), and equiaxed UFG ferrite. The multi-phase material exhibits a positive strain-rate sensitivity for yield and ultimate tensile strengths. Thermal imaging and digital image correlation allow for in situ measurements of temperature and local strain in the gauge length during tensile testing, but Lüders bands and Portevin Le Chatelier bands are not observed. A finite-element model uses empirical evidence from electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), plus constitutive equations to dissect the microstructural influences of grain size, dislocation density and TWIP-TRIP driving forces on tensile properties. Calibration of tensile properties not only captures the strain rate sensitivity of the multi-phase TWIP-TRIP steel, but also provides opportunity for a complete parametric analysis by changing one variable at a time (phase fraction, grain size, strain-induced twin fraction and strain-induced ε-martensite fraction). An equivalent set of high-rate mechanical properties can be matched by changing either the austenite phase fraction or the ratio of twinning vs. transformation to ε-martensite. This experimental-computational framework enables the prediction of mechanical properties in multi-phase steels beyond the experimental regime by tuning variables that are relevant to the alloy design process.

3.
Exp Mech ; 60(2)2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33029033

RESUMO

The commercialization of additive manufacturing (AM) is underway in the aerospace and biomedical device industries [1, 2]. However, most metal parts produced by AM are limited to non-critical applications, since the various processes produce internal porosity, anisotropy, and microstructural heterogeneities [1, 3]. It has been implied that small-scale mechanical tests can advance measurement standards for AM applications by probing the effects of defects and heterogeneities on mechanical properties at more appropriate length scales [4, 5]. Traditionally, small-scale techniques have been used to characterize location- and orientation-specific mechanical properties in wrought materials [6-10]. A common method for excising mechanical test specimens from bulk parts with negligible influence on specimen integrity involves electrical discharge machining (EDM) [11]. This work demonstrates that excising meso-scale tensile specimens from additively manufactured parts enables tracking of sub-surface and visible features of interest (porosity and microstructural heterogeneities) throughout the entire gauge section such that the individual contributions to deformation behavior can be assessed.

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