A Stacking Fault Energy Perspective into the Uniaxial Tensile Deformation Behavior and Microstructure of a Cr-Mn Austenitic Steel |
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Authors: | H. Barman A. S. Hamada T. Sahu B. Mahato J. Talonen S. K. Shee P. Sahu D. A. Porter L. P. Karjalainen |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Physics, Jadavpur University, Kolkata, 700 032, India 2. Centre for Advanced Steels Research, University of Oulu, Box 4200, 90014, Oulu, Finland 3. Metallurgical and Materials Engineering Department, Faculty of Petroleum & Mining Engineering, Suez Canal University, Box 43721, Suez, Egypt 4. Department of Physics, Ramananda College, Bishnupur, 722 122, West Bengal, India 5. Materials Science and Technology Division, National Metallurgical Laboratory, Jamshedpur, 831 007, India 6. Outokumpu Oyj, P.O. Box 140, 02201, Espoo, Finland 7. Department of Physics, Midnapore College, Midnapore, 721 101, West Bengal, India
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Abstract: | A Cr-Mn austenitic steel was tensile strained in the temperature range 273 K (0 °C) ≤ T ≤ 473 K (200 °C), to improve the understanding on the role of stacking fault energy (SFE) on the deformation behavior, associated microstructure, and mechanical properties of low-SFE alloys. The failed specimens were studied using X-ray diffraction, electron backscatter diffraction, and transmission electron microscopy. The SFE of the steel was estimated to vary between ~ 10 to 40 mJ/m2 at the lowest and highest deformation temperatures, respectively. At the ambient temperatures, the deformation involved martensite transformation (i.e., the TRIP effect), moderate deformation-induced twinning, and extended dislocations with wide stacking faults (SFs). The corresponding SF probability of austenite was very high (~10?2). Deformation twinning was most prevalent at 323 K (50 °C), also resulting in the highest uniform elongation at this temperature. Above 323 K (50 °C), the TRIP effect was suppressed and the incidence of twinning decreased due to increasing SFE. At elevated temperatures, fine nano-sized SF ribbons were observed and the SF probability decreased by an order (~10?3). High dislocation densities (~1015 m?2) in austenite were estimated in the entire deformation temperature range. Dislocations had an increasingly screw character up to 323 K (50 °C), thereafter becoming mainly edge. The estimated dislocation and twin densities were found to explain approximately the measured flow stress on the basis of the Taylor equation. |
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