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Development of the high-strength ductile ferritic alloys via regulating the intragranular and grain boundary precipitation of G-phase

  • Mujin Yang
  • , Chao Huang
  • , Jiajia Han*
  • , Haichen Wu
  • , Yilu Zhao
  • , Tao Yang
  • , Shenbao Jin
  • , Chenglei Wang
  • , Zhou Li
  • , Ruiying Shu
  • , Cuiping Wang
  • , Huanming Lu
  • , Gang Sha
  • , Xingjun Liu
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

A typical G-phase strengthened ferritic model alloy (1Ti:Fe-20Cr-3Ni-1Ti-3Si, wt.%) has been carefully studied using both advanced experimental (EBSD, TEM and APT) and theoretical (DFT) techniques. During the classic “solid solution and aging” process, the superfine (Fe, Ni)2TiSi-L21 particles densely precipitate within the ferritic grain and subsequently transform into the (Ni, Fe)16Ti6Si7-G phase. In the meanwhile, the elemental segregation at grain boundaries and the resulting precipitation of a large amount of the (Ni, Fe)16Ti6Si7-G phase are also observed. These nanoscale microstructural evolutions result in a remarkable increase in hardness (100–300 HV) and severe embrittlement. When the “cold rolling and aging” process is used, the brittle fracture is effectively suppressed without loss of nano-precipitation strengthening effect. Superhigh yield strength of 1700 MPa with 4% elongation at break is achieved. This key improvement in mechanical properties is mainly attributed to the pre-cold rolling process which effectively avoids the dense precipitation of the G-phase at the grain boundary. These findings could shed light on the further exploration of the precipitation site via optimal processing strategies.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)180-199
Number of pages20
JournalJournal of Materials Science and Technology
Volume136
DOIs
StatePublished - 10 Feb 2023
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • G-phase
  • Grain boundary segregation
  • Nano-precipitates
  • Precipitation strengthening

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