Temper embrittlement is a crucial phenomenon in steel manufacturing that affects material toughness without significantly impacting other mechanical properties at room temperature. This article examines two distinct temperature intervals of embrittlement: irreversible (250-400°C) and reversible (450-650°C). The process, influenced by various alloying elements and impurities, particularly affects commercial steels containing elements like chromium, nickel, and manganese. Understanding and preventing temper embrittlement is essential for maintaining steel quality and performance in industrial applications.
Temper embrittlement is inherent in many steels and is characterized by reduced impact toughness. At room temperature, the state of temper embrittlement has virtually no effect on other mechanical properties. Many alloy steels exhibit two distinct temperature intervals of temper embrittlement: irreversible temper brittleness within 250-400°C and reversible temper brittleness within 450-650°C.
Figure 1: Impact toughness vs. tempering temperature
The impact toughness of quenched steel after tempering at 250-400°C is lower than that achieved by tempering at temperatures below 250°C. When brittle steel tempered at 250-400°C is heated above 400°C and transformed into a tough state, subsequent tempering at 250-400°C cannot restore its brittle state. The cooling rate from the tempering temperature within 250-400°C does not affect impact toughness.
Steel in the state of irreversible temper embrittlement displays a bright intercrystalline fracture at the boundaries of former austenitic grains. This type of brittleness is present to some degree in all steels, including carbon grades. For this reason, medium-temperature tempering is generally avoided in practice, despite its ability to ensure a high yield limit.
The formation of carbides during martensite decomposition, particularly their precipitation as films at grain boundaries, is believed to cause irreversible temper embrittlement. These films dissolve at higher tempering temperatures and cannot reform during subsequent heating at 250-400°C. In low-alloy steels, silicon can prevent irreversible temper embrittlement by slowing martensite decomposition.
High-temperature tempering embrittlement manifests in two ways:
Carbon steels containing less than 0.5% Mn are resistant to reversible temper embrittlement. This phenomenon appears exclusively in alloy steels. Common alloying elements like chromium, nickel, and manganese promote temper embrittlement, with their combined effect being more pronounced than their individual impacts. Cr-Ni and Cr-Mn steels show the most significant embrittling effect. Small molybdenum additions (0.2-0.3%) can reduce temper embrittlement, while larger amounts intensify it.
High-purity alloy steels show no susceptibility to temper embrittlement. The phenomenon occurs due to impurities present in commercial steels, primarily phosphorus, tin, antimony, and arsenic.
To prevent temper embrittlement, the following measures are recommended:
For many years, scientists supported the "solution precipitation" hypothesis, which attributed the loss in impact toughness to the precipitation of phases such as phosphides at grain boundaries. These phases were thought to enter the α-solution when heated to approximately 650°C and precipitate during slow cooling, causing embrittlement. However, electron-microscopic analysis revealed no special precipitates at grain boundaries in embrittled steel, disproving this hypothesis.
Recent research has established that temper embrittlement occurs due to increased impurity concentration in boundary layers of the solid solution. This finding is supported by:
The concentration of harmful impurities at fracture surfaces can exceed their average steel concentration by factors of tens or hundreds. While commercial purity steels typically contain only thousandths or hundredths of a percent of impurities, these concentrations can reach several percent at fracture surfaces.
Temperature plays a crucial role in the segregation process:
The relationship between alloying elements and impurities is complex:
Strong atomic attractions between impurities and alloying elements lead to enhanced mutual segregation in pairs such as:
Multiple alloying elements can create synergistic effects. For example, the combination of nickel and chromium causes greater antimony segregation than the sum of their individual effects.
Understanding temper embrittlement is crucial for steel manufacturing and application. Through proper control of composition, processing parameters, and heat treatment procedures, the negative effects of temper embrittlement can be effectively managed.
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