4.7 Article

Copper and its effects on microstructure and correlated tensile properties of super duplex stainless steels

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2021.141544

Keywords

Duplex stainless steel; Cu; Copper; Microstructure; Intragranular austenite; Chemical partitioning; Mechanical properties; Nanoindentation; Tensile behavior

Funding

  1. COMET program within the K2 Center Integrated Computational Material, Process and Product Engineering (ICMPPE) [859480]
  2. Austrian Federal Ministries for Climate Action, Environment, Energy, Mobility, Innovation and Technology (BMK)
  3. Digital and Economic Affairs (BMDW) by the Austrian research funding association (FFG)
  4. federal state of Styria
  5. federal state of Upper Austria
  6. federal state of Tyrol

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Cu is considered a promising element to improve corrosion resistance in duplex steels, but there is limited research on its influence on the microstructure in the aged condition. This study fills that gap by showing the precipitation of Cu particles leading to intragranular austenite formation.
In the last few years, Cu is handled as a promising element to improve the corrosion resistance of duplex steels. Although there is a very limited number of studies in the literature describing the influence of Cu on the microstructure of duplex steels in the aged condition, to the authors' knowledge, no comprehensive study has been presented so far that describes in detail its influence on the microstructure and correlated mechanical properties in the solution-annealed condition. Consequently, this work is intended to fill that gap to provide a fundamental base for material design of novel duplex steels. Microstructural investigations showed a preferred formation of austenite combined with an elemental redistribution of Cr and Mo. Especially at the highest Cu content investigations revealed precipitation of Cu particles causing - so far unknown - an intragranular austenite in ferrite. It is proposed that the enrichment of austenite forming elements, i.e. Ni, at their phase boundaries as well as a low misfit between Cu particles and the intragranular austenite nuclei play a significant role during its nucleation. Due to the identified microstructural changes triggered by Cu an increased imbalance of the flow stress between ferrite and austenite, and thus a decrease of the macroscopic yield strength can be proposed. In turn an increased work hardening with Cu addition causes an unaffected ultimate tensile strength.

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