PRECIPITATION PROCESSES IN A SUPERMARTENSITIC 13CR6NI2.5MOTI STEEL DURING QUALITY HEAT TREATMENT

1 ROŽNOVSKÁ Gabriela
Co-authors:
1 KUBOŇ Zdeněk 2 HOLEŠINSKÝ Jan 2 Vodárek Vlastimil
Institutions:
1 Materials and Metallurgical Research, Ltd., Ostrava, Czech Republic, EU, gabriela.roznovska@mmvyzkum.cz
2 VSB - Technical University of Ostrava, Ostrava, Czech Republic, EU
Conference:
23rd International Conference on Metallurgy and Materials, Hotel Voronez I, Brno, Czech Republic, EU, May 21 - 23, 2014
Proceedings:
Proceedings 23rd International Conference on Metallurgy and Materials
Pages:
772-777
ISBN:
978-80-87294-52-9
ISSN:
2694-9296
Published:
18th June 2014
Proceedings of the conference were published in Web of Science and Scopus.
Metrics:
301 views / 180 downloads
Abstract

The balance between strength and toughness of supermartensitic steels can be controlled by heat treatment parameters. Quality heat treatment usually consists of quenching and single or double tempering above the Ac1 temperature. Such a treatment results in stabilization of reverted austenite in the tempered martensite. Tempering can also be accompanied by intensive precipitation processes, especially in high alloyed grades. A detailed TEM characterisation of precipitation processes in a 13Cr6Ni2.5MoTi supermartensitic steel proved that single tempering at temperatures of 600 °C and 690 °C was accompanied by precipitation of three minor phases: MX (TiX), M23C6 and Laves phase (Fe2Mo type). Precipitation processes were more intensive at 690 °C. Volume fractions of MX and M23C6 phases were low. Laves phase precipitation was intensive and particles of this minor phase grew fast. However, thermodynamic calculations using the Thermocalc software suggest that Laves phase is not an equilibrium phase in the steel under consideration.

Keywords: supermartensitic steels, precipitation, quality heat treatment

© This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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