Effect of Nitrogen Impurity on the Tensile Ductility and Impact Toughness of Al-Bearing DQP Steels

Article Preview

Abstract:

The influence of small contents of nitrogen present as an impurity in 0.3C Al-bearing steels, which were processed through thermomechanical rolling followed by direct quenching and partitioning (TMR-DQP), was examined in respect of room temperature tensile ductility and impact toughness. Two similar chemical compositions (in wt.%): Fe-0.3C-0.6Si-1.1Al (High-Al) with different N contents of 10 and 30 ppm were selected for this study. In addition, two other DQP steels with compositions: Fe-0.3C-1.0Si (High-Si) and Fe-0.3C-0.5Si-0.5Al (Al-Si), both containing about 30 ppm nitrogen, were also included in the study to compare the properties. Detailed metallographic studies using FESEM-EDS, TEM, EPMA and XRD combined with tensile testing and fractographic analysis indicated that already 30 ppm of nitrogen could impair tensile ductility of TMR-DQP processed High-Al steel in comparison to that with 10 ppm nitrogen. Similarly, the effect was adverse also in Al-Si steel (30 ppm N) despite its reduced Al content (0.5 wt.%), but High-Si steel (Al < 0.002 wt.%, N 30 ppm) did not show any such detrimental effect on tensile ductility. Extensive material characterization verified that even 30 ppm of nitrogen could impair ductility of Al-bearing steels, essentially due to the presence of AlN inclusions, despite that TMR-DQP processing enabled stabilization of 6–10% retained austenite (RA) in the steels. The capacity of RA in promoting improved ductility and strain hardening capacity was impaired by the presence of these inclusions. In contrast, impact toughness transition temperature T28J was not clearly affected with Al-Si when compared to low-N High-Al steel, although excessive splitting in Al-Si caused pronounced scatter in the results and increase in upper shelf impact toughness.

You might also be interested in these eBooks

Info:

Periodical:

Materials Science Forum (Volume 1105)

Pages:

35-40

Citation:

Online since:

November 2023

Export:

Price:

* - Corresponding Author

[1] J. Speer, D.K. Matlock, B.C. De Cooman, J.G. Schroth, Carbon partitioning into austenite after martensite transformation, Acta Mater. 51 (2003) 2611–2622

DOI: 10.1016/s1359-6454(03)00059-4

Google Scholar

[2] J.G. Speer, D. V. Edmonds, F.C. Rizzo, D.K. Matlock, Partitioning of carbon from supersaturated plates of ferrite, with application to steel processing and fundamentals of the bainite transformation, Curr Opin Solid State Mater Sci. 8 (2004) 219–237.

DOI: 10.1016/j.cossms.2004.09.003

Google Scholar

[3] J.G. Speer, F.C.R. Assunção, D.K. Matlock, D. V. Edmonds, The "quenching and partitioning" process: background and recent progress, Materials Research. 8 (2005) 417–423.

DOI: 10.1590/s1516-14392005000400010

Google Scholar

[4] P. Kantanen, M. Somani, A. Kaijalainen, O. Haiko, D. Porter, J. Kömi, Microstructural Characterization and Mechanical Properties of Direct Quenched and Partitioned High-Aluminum and High-Silicon Steels, Metals (Basel). 9 (2019) 256.

DOI: 10.3390/met9020256

Google Scholar

[5] M.J. Santofimia, T. Nguyen-Minh, L. Zhao, R. Petrov, I. Sabirov, J. Sietsma, New low carbon Q&P steels containing film-like intercritical ferrite, Materials Science and Engineering A. 527 (2010) 6429–6439.

DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2010.06.083

Google Scholar

[6] P.K. Kantanen, V. Javaheri, M.C. Somani, D.A. Porter, J.I. Kömi, Effect of deformation and grain size on austenite decomposition during quenching and partitioning of (high) silicon-aluminum steels, Mater Charact. 171 (2021) 110793.

DOI: 10.1016/j.matchar.2020.110793

Google Scholar

[7] M.J. Santofimia, L. Zhao, R. Petrov, C. Kwakernaak, W.G. Sloof, J. Sietsma, Microstructural development during the quenching and partitioning process in a newly designed low-carbon steel, Acta Mater. 59 (2011) 6059–6068.

DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2011.06.014

Google Scholar

[8] F.G. Wilson, T. Gladman, Aluminium nitride in steel, International Materials Reviews. 33 (1988) 221–286.

DOI: 10.1179/imr.1988.33.1.221

Google Scholar

[9] N. Nguyenvan, K. Kato, H. Ono, Precipitation Behavior of AlN Inclusions in Fe-0.5Al-2.0Mn Alloy Under Continuous Unidirectional Solidification Process, 8 (2021) 1–11.

DOI: 10.3389/fmats.2021.736284

Google Scholar

[10] W. Yan, W. Sha, L. Zhu, W. Wang, Y.Y. Shan, K. Yang, Delamination fracture related to tempering in a high-strength low-alloy steel, Metall Mater Trans A Phys Metall Mater Sci. 41 (2010) 159–171.

DOI: 10.1007/s11661-009-0068-y

Google Scholar

[11] S. Pallaspuro, S. Mehtonen, J. Kömi, Z. Zhang, D. Porter, Effects of local grain size and inclusions on the low-temperature toughness of low-carbon as-quenched martensite, Materials Science and Engineering A. 743 (2019) 611–622.

DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2018.11.105

Google Scholar

[12] P.K. Kantanen, M.C. Somani, D.A. Porter, J.I. Kömi, D.K. Misra, Microstructures and Mechanical Properties of Tough Ductile Ultrahigh-Strength Steels Processed through Direct Quenching and Partitioning, Materials Science Forum. 941 (2018) 468–473.

DOI: 10.4028/www.scientific.net/msf.941.468

Google Scholar

[13] J. Wang, S. Song, Z. Xue, D. Tang, G. Tong, D. Liu, Nitride-inclusion characterization in lightweight steel and re-precipitation behavior of AlN during heat treatment: effect of Al content, Journal of Iron and Steel Research International. 30 (2023) 350–362.

DOI: 10.1007/s42243-022-00839-8

Google Scholar