Bainite formation kinetics in high carbon alloyed steel
β Scribed by N.V. Luzginova; L. Zhao; J. Sietsma
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2008
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 215 KB
- Volume
- 481-482
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0921-5093
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
In recent years, many investigations have been carried out on the modeling of the bainite formation. In the present work, a physical approach proposed in the literature is implemented to model the formation of lower bainite in high carbon steels (1 wt.% C). In this model, the carbon diffusion is assumed to control the kinetics of the bainite formation. Both the nucleation and the growth rates are considered in an Avrami type analysis. The effect of alloying elements is taken into account considering only the thermodynamics of the system. The results and the physical meaning of the model parameters are discussed. It is shown that the diffusional approach gives a reasonable description of bainite formation kinetics in high carbon steel. Only two fitting parameters are used: the first accounts for carbon grain-boundary diffusion and the second is the initial nucleation-site density. The model satisfactorily accounts for the effect of transformation temperature, but does not take into account the carbide precipitation during bainite formation and the effect of alloying elements on the diffusion coefficient of carbon.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Fatigue properties of bainitic 100Cr6 (SAE 52100, JIS SUJ2) steel are investigated in the high cycle and very high cycle fatigue (VHCF) regime. Fully reversed tension-compression fatigue tests are performed with ultrasonic fatigue testing equipment. Specimens are grinded which leads to surface compr
The extremely slow transformation kinetics of a nanocrystalline bainitic steel allows the carbon content of the bainitic ferrite away from any carbon-enriched regions such as dislocations and boundaries to be determined by atom probe tomography as the bainite transformation progresses at 200 Β°C. A h