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In steels containing large-volume fractions of pearlite, deformation in the pearlite can initiate microcleavage crack formation at low temperatures and/or high strain rates. Since the fracture path is primarily along the cleavage plane in the ferrite plates (although there is some intercolony fracture), this indicates that there is some preferred orientation between ferrite plates in adjacent colonies within a prior austenite grain.
Since the strength of the pearlite is greater than that of the proeutectoid ferrite, the pearlite constrains the flow of the ferrite. The yield strength and strain-hardening rate of these steels increase with increasing pearlite (carbon) content because the constraint effect increases with increasing amounts of the hard aggregate and because pearlite refines the size of the proeutectoid grains.
The Fracture of Bainitic Steels. The addition of 0.05% molybdenum and boron to low carbon (0.1%) steels is able to suppress the austenite-ferrite transformation, which normally occurs between 700° and 850°C, without affecting the kinetics of the austenite-bainite transformation which then takes place between 675° and 450°C.
Bainite formed between 675° and about 525°C is called "upper bainite" and bainite formed between 525° and 450°C is called "lower bainite". Both structures consist of acicular ferrite and dispersed carbides. The tensile strength of these un-tempered bainites increases from 85,000 to 170,000 psi (585 - 1170 MPa) as the transformation temperature drops from 675° to 450°C.
Since the transformation temperature is determined by the amount of alloying elements (e.g., Mn and Cr) that are present, these elements exert an indirect effect on the yield find tensile strengths. The high strengths obtained in these steels is the result of two effects:
In lower bainite the cleavage planes in the acicular ferrite are not aligned so that the effective grain size for quasicleavage fracture is the ferrite needle size. Since this is one to two orders of magnitude smaller than the prior austenite grain size, the transition temperature of the lower bainite is much below that of upper bainite, at the same strength level.
A second feature that is important is the distribution of the carbides. In upper bainite these lie along grain boundaries and may promote brittleness by lowering γm as described previously in connection with furnace-cooled ferritic steels. In tempered lower bainite the carbides are more uniformly distributed in the ferrite and raise γm by interfering with cleavage cracks and promoting tearing as in the case of spherodized pearlites.
A second effect that should be noted is the variation of transition temperature with tensile strength in the untempered alloys. In the upper bainite a decrease in transformation temperature produces a refinement of ferrite needle size and this raises Rp0.2.
Tensile strength levels of 120,000 psi (830 MPa) or greater are obtained in lower bainite and the transition temperature decreases with increasing tensile strength. Because the fracture stress of the upper bainite is dependent on austenite grain size, and since the carbide particles are already large, tempering has little effect on tensile and impact properties.
The features that are pertinent to the fracture of martensite are as follows:
Secondly, there is the decrease in yield strength and the increase in dispersed carbide content (γm increases), both of which cause the impact-transition tempering range to be lowered as the tempering temperature is increased. Tensile ductility and Cv (max) increase, at the same strength level, as the microstructure is refined.
Temper embrittlement is reversible. If the tempering temperature is raised above the critical range, the transition temperature is lowered, but it can be raised back again if the material is reheat treated in the critical range. The presence of trace elements appears to be responsible for the embrittlement. The most important of these are antimony, phosphorus, tin, and arsenic, with manganese and silicon having a small effect. Molybdenum reduces temper brittleness when other alloying elements are present. Nickel and chromium appear to have little effect.
The high strength level of these steels makes them extremely brittle, especially when particular environments such as water vapor or hydrogen are present.
Consequently these steels are corrosion-resistant in oxidizing atmospheres, which strengthen this layer, but are susceptible to corrosion in a reducing environment, which breaks down the layer. The corrosion resistance (in oxidizing environment) increases with increasing chromium content and also with increasing nickel content. The latter element increases the overall passivity of the iron.
Carbon is also added to improve mechanical properties (yield and tensile strength) and to stabilize the austenitic stainless steel. Generally speaking, the stainless steels can be classified by their microstructures:
Austenitic stainless steels have a FCC structure and consequently do not fracture by cleavage, even at cryogenic temperatures. After heavy cold rolling (80%), 310 type steels have an extremely high yield strength combined with a notch sensitivity ratio of 1.0 at temperatures as low as -253°C and consequently are used in missile systems for storage tanks for liquid hydrogen. Similarly 301 type stainless can be used down to -183°C (e.g., for liquid oxygen storage tanks), but below this temperature the austenite is unstable and deforms to brittle, untempered martensite if any plastic deformation occurs at the low temperatures.
Most austenitic stainless steels are used in corrosive environments. When they are heated in the temperature range 500-900°C (e.g., during welding), chromium carbide precipitates at austenite grain boundaries, resulting in a depletion of chromium from the region near to the boundaries. This depleted layer is very susceptible to corrosive attack (particularly in hot chloride environments), and localized corrosion, in the presence of applied stress, leads to inter-granular brittle fracture.
To alleviate this problem, small quantities of elements which are stronger carbide formers than chromium, such as titanium or niobium are commonly added. These elements combine with the carbon to form alloy carbides, which prevents chromium depletion and subsequent susceptibility to stress corrosion cracking. This process is called "stabilizing".
Austenitic stainless steels are used extensively in high-temperature applications (e.g., pressure vessels) where both corrosion resistance and creep resistance are required. Some of these steels are susceptible to cracking in the heat-affected zone near welds during postwelding heat treatments and/or elevated temperature service. The cracking is the result of precipitation of niobium or titanium carbides in the grains and grain boundaries when the weld is reheated.
Date Published: May-2005
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Total Materia Extended Range includes the largest database of fracture mechanics parameters for hundreds of metal alloys and heat treatments conditions. K1C, KC, crack growth and Paris law parameters are given, with the corresponding graph of crack growth.
Monotonic properties are added for the reference, as well as estimates of missing parameters based on monotonic properties where applicable.
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