The influence of pearlite fraction on the shock properties of ferrite-pearlite steel microstructures: Insight into the effect of second-phase particles

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Abstract

The goal of this work is to investigate the effect of varying phase fractions on the overall spall strength and damage behavior of a material. Specifically, two plain carbon, ferrite-pearlite steels (1045 and A283) were subjected to spall recovery experiments to investigate the effect of pearlite fraction on spall strength and total damage. The A283 (20% pearlite) alloy exhibited a higher Hugoniot elastic limit and spall strength compared with 1045 (60% pearlite). Discontinuous and continuous yielding behaviors were observed at quasi-static and dynamic rates for A283 and 1045, respectively. The yielding behavior was connected to pearlite fraction and the prevalence of dislocation-emitting, ferrite/cementite interfaces. Postmortem characterization revealed cementite lamellae cracking within pearlite of 1045, suggesting that pearlite reduces spall strength by providing low-energy damage nucleation sites. The rate of damage growth and coalescence was similar between the two alloys; however, 1045 exhibited more continuous cracks than A283, which exhibited a greater prevalence of discrete voids.

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Euser, V. K., Martinez, D. T., Valdez, J. A., Trujillo, C. P., Cady, C. M., Jones, D. R., & Fensin, S. J. (2022). The influence of pearlite fraction on the shock properties of ferrite-pearlite steel microstructures: Insight into the effect of second-phase particles. Journal of Applied Physics, 131(11). https://doi.org/10.1063/5.0085674

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