Effect of cooling rate on the high strain rate properties of boron steel |
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Authors: | Alexander Bardelcik Christopher P. SalisburyAuthor VitaeSooky WinklerAuthor Vitae Mary A. WellsAuthor VitaeMichael J. WorswickAuthor Vitae |
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Affiliation: | University of Waterloo, Department of Mechanical and Mechatronics Engineering, 200 University Avenue West, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3G1 |
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Abstract: | In this work, the effect of cooling rate on the high strain rate behavior of hardened boron steel was investigated. A furnace was used to austenize boron sheet metal blanks which were then quenched in various media. The four measured cooling rates during the solid state transformation were: 25 (compressed air quench), 45 (compressed air quench), 250 (oil quench) and 2200 °C/s (water quench). Micro-hardness measurements and optical microscopy verified the expected as-quenched microstructure for the various cooling rates. Miniature dog-bone specimens were machined from the quenched blanks and tested in tension at a quasi-static rate, 0.003 s−1 (Instron) and a high rate, 960 s−1 (split Hopkinson tensile bar). The resulting stress vs. strain curves showed that the UTS increased from 1270 MPa to 1430 MPa as strain rate increased for the specimens cooled at 25 °C/s, while the UTS increased from 1615 MPa to 1635 MPa for the specimens cooled at 2200 °C/s. The high rate tests showed increased ductility for the 25, 45 and 250 °C/s specimens, while the specimens cooled at 2200 °C/s showed a slight decrease. The Hollomon hardening curve was fit to the true stress vs. true strain curves and showed that the mechanical response of the high rate tests exhibited a greater rate of hardening prior to fracture than the quasi-static tests. The hardening rate also increased for the specimens quenched at higher cooling rates. Optical micrographs of the fractured specimens showed that the failure mechanism transformed from a ductile-shear mode at the lower cooling rates to a shear mode at the high cooling rates. |
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Keywords: | Hot forming die quenching Ultra high strength steel High strain rate Split Hopkinson tensile bar Martensite |
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