Litcius/Paper detail

Mechanical Property of Ultrafine Elongated Grain Structure Steel Processed by Warm Tempforming and Its Application to Ultra-High-Strength Bolt

Yuuji Kimura, T. Inoue

2020ISIJ International37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Our strategy is to enhance the fracture property of ultra-high-strength low-alloy steels with a yield strength of 1.4 GPa or over by arresting the propagation of brittle cracks in hierarchical, anisotropic, and ultrafine-grained structures. This provides a fail-safe design in addition to suppressing crack initiation. The present article reviews the strength, ductility, toughness, and delayed fracture resistance of ultra-high-strength low-alloy steels with ultrafine elongated grain structures processed by the deformation of tempered martensitic structures at elevated temperatures (referred to as warm tempforming). The evolution of heterogeneous microstructures during warm tempforming using multi-pass caliber rolling is discussed, as are the microstructural factors controlling the strength and fracture properties of warm tempformed steels. Furthermore, we apply warm tempformed steels with ultrafine elongated grain structures to the fabrication of ultra-high-strength bolts.

Topics & Concepts

Materials scienceDuctility (Earth science)MicrostructureMetallurgyMartensiteBrittlenessFracture toughnessDeformation (meteorology)AlloyToughnessBrittle fractureFracture (geology)Composite materialFracture mechanicsGrain sizeCreepMicrostructure and Mechanical Properties of SteelsMetal Alloys Wear and PropertiesHydrogen embrittlement and corrosion behaviors in metals