Two-step continuous cooling heat treatment applied in a low carbon bainitic steel

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Abstract

Thermo-mechanical treatments using continuous cooling after forging are an established method for producing bainitic steels, mainly because of the elimination of energy intensive additional heat treatment processes. The cooling is usually employed in an uncontrolled manner in the industrial sector, which can be detrimental to the resulting microstructural morphology and, consequently, to the final product properties. In this study, a new controlled two-step cooling route based on the principles of bainitic displacive growth was designed and applied in a 0.18C (wt-%) steel. Inverse finite element method was used on the cooling data to obtain the evolution of temperatures for the samples during cooling, allowing to assess point to point cooling rates. Investigations via X-ray diffraction, optical microscopy analysis and hardness testing revealed a variation of bainitic morphology, namely, the transition from granular bainite to lath-like bainite with relatively high hardness and constituents/ phase boundaries than the pre-treated microstructure.

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de Castro, P. J., de Figueiredo Silveira, A. C., Ivaniski, T. M., Turra, C. J., Epp, J., & Rocha, A. da S. (2021). Two-step continuous cooling heat treatment applied in a low carbon bainitic steel. Materials Research, 24(2). https://doi.org/10.1590/1980-5373-mr-2020-0334

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