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Effect of retained austenite stability on cyclic deformation behavior of low‐alloy transformation‐induced plasticity steels
Author(s) -
Christodoulou Peter I.,
Kermanidis Alexis T.,
Haidemenopoulos Gregory N.,
Krizan Daniel,
Polychronopoulou Kyriaki
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
fatigue and fracture of engineering materials and structures
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.887
H-Index - 84
eISSN - 1460-2695
pISSN - 8756-758X
DOI - 10.1111/ffe.12972
Subject(s) - materials science , austenite , softening , plasticity , dimple , hardening (computing) , microstructure , alloy , isothermal process , metallurgy , martensite , composite material , diffusionless transformation , isothermal transformation diagram , cleavage (geology) , strain hardening exponent , fracture (geology) , bainite , thermodynamics , physics , layer (electronics)
The retained austenite (RA) characteristics of Al‐containing TRIP700 steels have been manipulated using varying bainitic isothermal transformation (BIT) processing. The microstructural evolution was investigated using optical microscopy and quantitative image analysis, while the amount of transformed RA was evaluated with the saturation magnetization (SM) technique. Cyclic behavior is found to depend on the applied strain amplitude and stability of RA. At strain amplitudes with comparable elastic and plastic strain components, cyclic softening prevails, facilitated by more stable RA microstructures and Low Cycle Fatigue (LCF) performance benefits from a lower RA stability, which controls the amount of cyclic softening rate. With increasing plastic strain component, a transition to cyclic hardening is observed, and the transition strain increases with increasing RA stability. LCF performance deteriorates because of excessive cyclic strain hardening promoting martensitic transformation. The effect is accompanied by a transition from mixed dimple/cleavage to cleavage‐type fracture characteristics.

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