929 resultados para High strength steel


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The profiled steel roof and wall cladding systems in Australia are commonly made of very thin high tensile steels, and are crest-fixed with screw fasteners. A review of current literature and design standards indicated the need to improve the understanding of the behaviour of crest-fixed steel cladding systems under wind uplift/suction loading, in particular, the local failures. Therefore a detailed experimental study using a series of small scale tests and some two-span cladding tests was conducted to investigate the local pull-through and dimpling failures in the commonly used steel cladding systems. The applicability of the current design formulae for the pull-through strength of crest-fixed steel classing systems was investigated first. An improved design formula was then developed in terms of the thickness and ultimate tensile strenth of steel cladding material and diameter of screw head or washer. This paper presents the details of this investigation and its results. A review of current design and test methods is also included.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

In this work, static and drop-weight impact experiments, which have been conducted using three-point bend fracture specimens of a high-strength low-alloy steel, are analysed by performing finite-element simulations. The Gurson constitutive model that accounts for the ductile failure mechanisms of microvoid nucleation, growth and is employed within the framework of a finite deformation plasticity theory. Two populations of second-phase particles are considered, including large inclusions which initiate voids at an early stage and small particles which require large strains to nucleate voids. The most important objective of the work is to assess quantitatively the effects of material inertia, strain rate sensitivity and local adiabatic temperature rise (due to conversion of plastic work into heat) on dynamic ductile crack initiation. This is accomplished by comparing the evolution histories of void volume fraction near the notch tip in the static analysis with the dynamic analyses. The results indicate that increased strain hardening caused by strain rate sensitivity, which becomes important under dynamic loading, plays a benign role in considerably slowing down the void growth rate near the notch tip. This is partially opposed by thermal softening caused by adiabatic heating near the notch tip.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The delamination or splitting of mechanical test specimens of rolled steel plate is a phenomenon that has been studied for many years. In the present study, splitting during fracture of tensile and Charpy V-notch (CVN) test specimens is examined in a high-strength low-alloy plate steel. It is shown that delamination did not occur in test specimens from plate in the as-rolled condition, but was severe in material tempered in the temperature range 500 °C to 650 °C. Minor splitting was seen after heating to 200 °C, 400 °C, and 700 °C. Samples that had been triple quenched and tempered to produce a fine equiaxed grain size also did not exhibit splitting. Microstructural and preferred orientation studies are presented and are discussed as they relate to the splitting phenomenon. It is concluded that the elongated as-rolled grains and grain boundary embrittlement resulting from precipitates (carbides and nitrides) formed during reheating were responsible for the delamination.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

Increased fuel economy, combined with the need for the improved safety has generated the development of new hot-rolled high-strength low-alloy (HSLA) and multiphase steels such as dual-phase or transformation-induced plasticity steels with improved ductility without sacrificing strength and crash resistance. However, the modern multiphase steels with good strength-ductility balance showed deteriorated stretch-flangeability due to the stress concentration region between the soft ferrite and hard martensite phases [1]. Ferritic, hot-rolled steels can provide good local elongation and, in turn, good stretch-flangeability [2]. However, conventional HSLA ferritic steels only have a tensile strength of not, vert, similar600 MPa, while steels for the automotive industry are now required to have a high tensile strength of not, vert, similar780 MPa, with excellent elongation and stretch-flangeability [1]. This level of strength and stretch-flangeability can only be achieved by precipitation hardening of the ferrite matrix with very fine precipitates and by ferrite grain refinement. It has been suggested that Mo [3] and Ti [4] should be added to form carbides and decrease the coiling temperature to 650 °C since only a low precipitation temperature can provide the precipitation refinement [4]. These particles appeared to be (Ti, Mo)C, with a cubic lattice and a parameter of 0.433 nm, and they were aligned in rows [4]. It was reported [4] that the formation of these very fine carbides led to an increase in strength of not, vert, similar300 MPa. However, the detailed analysis of these particles has not been performed to date due to their nanoscale size. The aim of this work was to carry out a detailed investigation using atom probe tomography (APT) of precipitates formed in hot-rolled low-carbon steel containing additions Ti and Mo.

The investigated low-carbon steel, containing Fe–0.1C–1.24Mn–0.03Si–0.11Cr–0.11Mo–0.09Ti–0.091Al at.%, was produced by hot rolling. The processing route has been described in detail elsewhere [5] European Patent Application, 1616970 A1, 18.01.2006.[5]. The microstructure was characterised by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) on a Philips CM 20, operated at 200 kV using thin foil and carbon replica techniques. Qualitative energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDXS) was used to analyse the chemical composition of particles. The atomic level of particle characterisation was performed at the University of Sydney using a local electrode atom probe [6]. APT was carried out using a pulse repetition rate of 200 kHz and a 20% pulse fraction on the sample with temperature of 80 K. The extent of solute-enriched regions (radius of gyration) and the local solute concentrations in these regions were estimated using the maximum separation envelope method with a grid spacing of 0.1 nm [7]. A maximum separation distance between the atoms of interest of dmax = 1 nm was used.

The microstructure of the steel consisted of two types of fine ferrite grains: (i) small recrystallised grains with an average grain size of 1.4 ± 0.2 μm; and (ii) grains with a high dislocation density (5.8 ± 1.4 × 1014 m−2) and an average grain size of 1.9 ± 0.1 μm in thickness and 2.7 ± 0.1 μm in length (Fig. 1a). Some grains with high dislocation density displayed an elongated shape with Widmanstätten side plates and also the formation of cells and subgrains (Fig. 1a). The volume fraction of recrystallised grains was 34 ± 8%.


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

While advanced high strength steels (AHSS) have numerous advantages for the automotive industry, they can be susceptible to interfacial fracture when spot-welded. In this study, the susceptibility of interfacial fracture to spot-weld microstructure and hardness is examined, as well as the corresponding relationships between fatigue, overload performance, and interfacial fracture for a TRIP (transformation induced plasticity) steel. Simple post-weld heat-treatments were used to alter the weld microstructure. The effect on interfacial fracture of diluting the weld pool by welding the TRIP material to non-TRIP steel was examined, along with the effect of altering the base material microstructure. Results show that weld hardness is not a good indicator of either the susceptibility to interfacial fracture, or the strength of the joint, and that interfacial fracture does not necessarily lead to a decrease in strength compared to conventional weld-failure mechanisms, i.e. button pullout. It was also found that while interfacial fracture does affect low cycle to failure behavior, there was no effect on high cycle fatigue.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The influence of low-strain deformation behavior on curl and springback in advanced high strength steels (AHSS) was assessed using a bend-under-tension test. The effect of yielding behavior on curl and springback was examined by heat-treating two dual-phase steels to induce yield point elongation, while keeping a relatively constant tensile strength and a constant sheet thickness. A dual-phase and TRIP steel with similar initial thickness and tensile strengths were also examined to investigate the effect of work-hardening on curl and springback. It is shown that while current understanding limits prediction of curl and springback in bending under tension using only the initial sheet thickness and tensile strength, both the yielding and work-hardening behavior can affect the results. Explanations for these effects are proposed in terms of the discontinuous yielding and flow stress in the materials.


Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The microstructure-property relationship in conventional high strength low alloy (HSLA) steel was evaluated using data obtained from transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atom probe tomography (APT). Atom probe tomography allowed the characterisation of fine TiC particles with average radius of 3±1·2 nm that were not observed by TEM. The increase in the yield strength of steel due to the presence of fine precipitates was calculated to be 128 MPa.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The influence of pre-straining and bake-hardening on the mechanical properties of thermomechanically processed 0.2C-1.5Si-1.5Mn-0.2Mo-0.004Nb (wt%) steel was analysed using tensile test, transmission electron microscopy (TEM) and atom probe tomography (APT). This steel after processing had high strength (~1200MPa) and good ductility (~20%) due to the formation of fully bainitic microstructure with nano-layers of bainitic ferrite and retained austenite. The bake hardening (BH) of pre-strained (PS) samples increased the yield strength of steel up to 690MPa and showed the bake-hardening response of 220MPa due to the operation of several strengthening mechanisms such as transformation induced plasticity during pre-straining and pinning the dislocations by carbon during bake-hardening treatment. The carbon content of the bainitic ferrite and retained austenite before and after bake-hardening treatment, the solute distribution between these phases and the local composition of fine Fe-C clusters and particles formed during bake-hardening treatment was calculated using APT. The bainitic ferrite and retained austenite microstructural characteristics such as thickness of the layers and their dislocation density before and after bake-hardening treatment were studied using TEM.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The multi-phase structure of a novel low-alloy transformation induced plasticity (TRIP) steel was designed through experimental analysis. The evolutions of both microstructure and mechanical properties during the two-stage heat treatment were analyzed. The phase transformations during the intercritical annealing and the isothermal bainitic transformation were investigated by means of dilatometry. It was shown that two types of C diffusion were detected during intercritical annealing and a complex microstructure was formed after heat treatment. The processing parameters were selected in such a way to obtain microstructures with systematically different volume fractions of ferrite, bainite and retained austenite. The volume fractions of ferrite and retained austenite were found to be two main factors controlling the ductility. Furthermore, a high volume fraction of C-rich retained austenite, which was stabilized at room temperature, was the origin of a TRIP effect. The resulting material demonstrates a significant improvement in the ultimate tensile strength (1077. MPa) with good uniform elongation (22.5%), as compared to conventional TRIP steels. © 2014 Elsevier B.V.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The phase transformation and precipitation in a high-strength low-alloy steel have been studied over a large range of cooling rates, and a continuous cooling transformation (CCT) diagram has been produced. These experiments are unique because the measurements were made from samples cooled directly from the melt, rather than in homogenized and re-heated billets. The purpose of this experimental design was to examine conditions pertinent to direct strip casting. At the highest cooling rates which simulate strip casting, the microstructure was fully bainitic with small regions of pearlite. At lower cooling rates, the fraction of polygonal ferrite increased and the pearlite regions became larger. The CCT diagram and the microstructural analysis showed that the precipitation of NbC is suppressed at high cooling rates, and is likely to be incomplete at intermediate cooling rates.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The critical conditions for hydrogenembrittlement (HE) risk of highstrengthgalvanizedsteel (HSGS) wires and tendons exposed to alkaline concrete pore solutions have been evaluated by means of electrochemical and mechanical testing. There is a relationship between the hydrogenembrittlementrisk in HSGS and the length of hydrogen evolution process in alkalinemedia. The galvanizedsteel suffers anodic dissolution simultaneously to the hydrogen evolution which does not stop until the passivation process is completed. HSGS wires exposed to a very highalkalinemedia have showed HE risk with loss in mechanical properties only if long periods with hydrogen evolution process take place with a simultaneous intensive galvanized coating reduction.

Relevância:

100.00% 100.00%

Publicador:

Resumo:

The study brings new insights on the hydrogen assisted stress corrosion on damage tolerance of a high-strength duplex stainless steel wire which concerns its potential use as active reinforcement for concrete prestressing. The adopted procedure was to experimentally state the effect of hydrogen on the damage tolerance of cylindrical smooth and precracked wire specimens exposed to stress corrosion cracking using the aggressive medium of the standard test developed by FIP (International Prestressing Federation). Stress corrosion testing, mechanical fracture tests and scanning electron microscopy analysis allowed the damage assessment, and explain the synergy between mechanical loading and environment action on the failure sequence of the wire. In presence of previous damage, hydrogen affects the wire behavior in a qualitative sense, consistently to the fracture anisotropy attributable to cold drawing, but it does not produce quantitative changes since the steel fully preserves its damage tolerance.