Abstract
Transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) is a phenomenon that improves the deformability of highstrength steel. TRIP depends on deformation-induced martensite transformation behavior. To clarify the mechanism of the transformation in low-alloy TRIP steel, we evaluated the transformation behavior via in-plane tension and compression experiments. During tensile and compressive deformation, the volume fraction of austenite (V_) decreased as strain and stress increased. The rate at which V_ decreased during compressive deformation was slower than that during tensile deformation. However, after continuous deformation (i.e., tensile deformation under compression and vice versa), V_ depended on stress, not strain. The transformation behavior was controlled by the applied stress, regardless of strain path and stored strain. It is appropriate to apply a stress-dominant strain-induced transformation model to explain this macroscopic transformation behavior.
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Kawata, H., Yasutomi, T., Shirakami, S., Nakamura, K., & Sakurada, E. (2021). Deformation-induced martensite transformation behavior during tensile and compressive deformation in low-alloy trip steel sheets. ISIJ International, 61(2), 527–536. https://doi.org/10.2355/isijinternational.ISIJINT-2020-382
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