The effects of warm rolling reduction ratio ranging from 20% to 55% on microstructure evolution, the tensile deformation mechanism, and the associated mechanical properties of an Fe-30Mn-4Si-2Al TRIP/TWIP steel were studied. The warm rolling process resulted in the formation and proliferation of sub-structure, comprising dislocations, deformation twins as well as shear bands, and the densities of dislocation and twins were raised along with the increase in rolling reduction. The investigated steel, with a fully recrystallized state, exhibited a single ε-TRIP effect during the room temperature tensile deformation, on top of dislocation glide. However, the formation and growth of twin lamellae and ε-martensite were detected simultaneously during tensile deformation of the warm rolled specimen with rolling reduction of 35%, leading to a good balance between high yield strength of 785 MPa, good total ductility of 44%, and high work hardening rate. As the rolling reduction increased to 55%, the specimen revealed a relatively low work hardening rate, due to the high dislocation density, and dislocation glide was the main deformation mechanism. As a result, a tensile deformation mechanism that started from a single ε-martensitic transformation moved to a bi-mode of ε-martensitic transformation accompanied with deformation twinning, and finally to dislocation glide with the increasing warm rolling reduction was proposed.
CITATION STYLE
Dong, Y., Sun, Z., Xia, H., Feng, J., Du, J., Fang, W., … Yin, F. (2018). The influence of warm rolling reduction on microstructure evolution, tensile deformation mechanism and mechanical properties of an Fe-30Mn-4Si-2Al TRIP/TWIP steel. Metals, 8(10). https://doi.org/10.3390/met8100742
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