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Effect of Mn Segregation on
Mechanical Properties of 0.3C-11Mn-2.7A1-1.8Si-Fe Medium Mn Steel and Its Mechanism |
CAI Xingzhou 1,
LIU Shengjie 1, ZHANG Yusen 1, LI Xiaolong 1, ZHANG
Yuhe 1, ZHANG Wenbin 1, CHEN Lei 1, JIN Miao 1,2
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1 Collenge of Mechanical Engineering, Yanshan
University, Qinhuangdao 066004, China
2 Tongyu
Heavy Industry Co. Ltd., Yucheng 251200, China
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Cite this article:
. Effect of Mn Segregation on
Mechanical Properties of 0.3C-11Mn-2.7A1-1.8Si-Fe Medium Mn Steel and Its Mechanism. Acta Metall Sin, 0, (): 0-0.
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Abstract
Improvements in passenger safety and fuel
efficiency are crucial issues in the automotive industry. The use of advanced
high-strength steel (AHSS) in automotive parts has been suggested as a solution
to these issues because it enables large weight reduction and good crash
worthiness. Strength and ductility are the key mechanical properties of
automotive AHSS. However, high strength is often accompanied by low ductility,
resulting in the so-called strength–ductility trade-off dilemma. Currently,
there is an increasing demand for automotive AHSS that exhibits a balance
between strength and ductility. Lightweight and high-strength medium manganese
steel (MMnS with a Mn mass fraction of 3%–12%), as
a representative example of the third-generation automotive AHSS, has an
excellent combination of strength and plasticity due to the effective usage of
the coupled transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) effect and twinning-induced plasticity (TWIP) effect of the
metastable austenite constituent upon deformation. To further improve
comprehensive mechanical properties, MMnS with a high Mn content were developed
to increase the austenite fraction. Thus, a duplex structure with an ultrafine
ferrite and austenite matrix was formed. However, Mn segregation is likely to
occur in MMnS with increasing Mn content, especially in the cases of Mn >10% (mass fraction), which
considerably influences MMnS’s performance. Therefore, the effects of Mn. segregation
on the overall mechanical properties, microstructure and deformation mechanism
of MMnS need to be elucidated in more details. In this paper, the influence of
Mn segregation on the microstructure and mechanical properties of MMnS with an
austenite–ferrite duplex structure and a nominal composition of
0.3C–11Mn–2.7Al–1.8Si–Fe was systemically investigated. Specifically, the
underlying mechanism of Mn segregation that affects the mechanical and
microstructural behavior of cold-rolled and annealed MMnS was analyzed. The
results show that Mn segregation causes the formation of a Mn-rich banded
structure, where the grain size of austenite is larger, austenite stability is
higher, and fine ferrite is distributed more sparsely on the austenite matrix
compared with the case without Mn segregation. The dominant plastic deformation
mechanism of austenite in the non-Mn segregation zone involves martensitic
transformation and twinning, leading to the coupled TRIP + TWIP effect, while
the rate of martensitic transformation is higher than those without Mn
segregation. However, the martensitic transformation is inhibited in the
austenite of the Mn-rich structure because of its higher stability, limiting
the TRIP effect. Consequently, the test MMnS with Mn segregation shows lower
ductility and fracture resistance than those without Mn segregation; moreover,
its finer austenite enhances the work-hardening capacity.
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Received: 08 October 2023
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