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PRODUCTION OF A DUAL PHASE STEEL FROM A LOW CARBON MICROALLOYED STEEL
Author(s) -
Jorge Antonio Navarro Farfan,
Pedro Garnica–González,
José Sergio Pacheco Cedeño,
Jose Jaime Lopez Soria,
Ivan Gutiérrez Barajas
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
dyna
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.177
H-Index - 11
eISSN - 1989-1490
pISSN - 0012-7361
DOI - 10.6036/9297
Subject(s) - materials science , microalloyed steel , microstructure , ultimate tensile strength , metallurgy , ferrite (magnet) , martensite , volume fraction , thermomechanical processing , dual phase steel , tensile testing , indentation hardness , elongation , continuous cooling transformation , precipitation hardening , composite material , austenite , bainite
A dual phase steel was manufactured with the chemical composition established for a microalloyed steel, in order to take advantage of the hardening mechanisms of both steels. The treatment temperature was established based on the critical transformation temperatures obtained by dilatometric techniques and simulated phase transformation diagrams. The specimens were hot rolled in a six continuous passes with a total rolling time of 65 seconds up to 47% thickness reduction. Optical microscopy and scanning electron microscopy were used for microstructural characterization in order to obtain the average ferritic grain diameter and volume fraction of ferrite and martensite. Vickers microhardness for each phases was determined and tension tests were performed to obtain the ultimate tensile strenght, 0.2% offset yield strength, percent reduction in area and percent elongation. Microstructures composed of ferrite and martensite were obtained, with a 35.98% average percent of martensite. The average ultimate tensile strenght values and and percent elongation were 719 MPa and 22%, respectivelly. The use of simulated time-temperature-transformation and continuous-cooling-transformation diagrams, as well as the thermal history of thermomechanical and intercritical processes, proved to be useful in the development of processing routes for the manufacture of dual-phase steels with a specific chemical composition. The precipitation mechanisms present in microalloyed steels enhance the microstructure refinement in a dual phase condition.

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