4.6 Article

Effect of Heat Input on Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Deposited Metal of E120C-K4 High Strength Steel Flux-Cored Wire

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16083239

Keywords

heat input; high strength steel flux-cored wire; deposited metal; microstructure; inclusion; mechanical properties

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The study investigated the effect of different heat inputs (1.45 kJ/mm, 1.78 kJ/mm, and 2.31 kJ/mm) on the microstructure and mechanical properties of deposited metals from a self-developed high strength steel flux-cored wire. It was found that as the heat input increased, the microstructure of the deposited metals became coarser. Different types of ferrite and bainite were observed depending on the heat input. The optimum mechanical properties were achieved with a heat input of 1.78 kJ/mm, resulting in a tensile strength of 793 MPa and an average impact toughness of 56 J at -40 degrees C.
The effect of different heat inputs of 1.45 kJ/mm, 1.78 kJ/mm and 2.31 kJ/mm on the microstructure and mechanical properties of deposited metals of the self-developed AWS A5.28 E120C-K4 high strength steel flux-cored wire was studied by optical microscope, scanning electron microscope and mechanical property test. With the increase in heat input, the results showed that the microstructure of deposited metals became coarse. Acicular ferrite increased at first and then decreased, granular bainite increased and degenerated upper bainite and martensite decreased slightly. Under the low heat input of 1.45 kJ/mm, the cooling rate was fast and the element diffusion was uneven, which caused composition segregation and easy to form large size inclusions SiO2-TiC-CeAlO3 with weak binding to the matrix. Under the middle heat input of 1.78 kJ/mm, the composite rare earth inclusions in dimples were mainly TiC-CeAlO3. The dimples were small and uniformly distributed, and the dimple fracture mainly depended on the wall-breaking connection between medium-sized dimples rather than an intermediate media. Under the high heat input of 2.31 kJ/mm, SiO2 was easy to adhere to high melting point Al2O3 oxides to form irregular composite inclusions. Such irregular inclusions do not need to absorb too much energy to form necking. Finally, the integrated effects of microstructure and inclusions resulted in the optimum mechanical properties of deposited metals with a heat input of 1.78 kJ/mm, which was a tensile strength of 793 MPa and an average impact toughness at -40 degrees C of 56 J.

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