4.7 Article

Coupled solute drag and transformation stasis during ferrite formation in Fe-C-Mn-Mo

Journal

ACTA MATERIALIA
Volume 139, Issue -, Pages 62-74

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.actamat.2017.08.010

Keywords

Ferrite growth; Coupled solute drag effect (CSDE); Free energy dissipation; Steels

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Ferrite growth kinetics in a series of quaternary Fe-C-xMn-0.4Mo (wt. %) alloys (x = 0.5, 0.8, 1.1, 1.3) has been studied using the decarburization technique at temperatures between 755 degrees C and 806 degrees C. It is shown for the first time that the ferrite growth kinetics in the quaternary system can be well predicted using solute drag parameters (E-b and DPtrans) tuned from experiments on model ternary Fe-C-Mn and Fe-C-Mo alloys. This should be interpreted as great encouragement for the steel phase transformations community and provides hope for extrapolation of research activities on model ternary Fe-C-X systems to real industrial steels. The important effect of carbon segregation to the migrating interface is discussed in the context of Qiu et al.'s recent unsuccessful attempt to predict the growth behaviour in the Fe-C-Mn-Si quaternary system based on parameters tuned from the Fe-C-Si and Fe-C-Mn systems. Using the successful Fe-C-Mn-Mo growth model, traditional ferrite precipitation at lower temperatures of 550 degrees C and 650 degrees C is then described and a new explanation for transformation stasis is proposed (local carbon profile inversion) which is consistent with recent analytical transmission electron microscopy (ATEM) measurements showing negligible interfacial solute segregation at the onset of stasis in an Fe-C-Mn-Mo alloy. We propose that the onset of transformation stasis is controlled by the competition between the carbon flux in the austenite away from the interface and the decrease in the interfacial carbon content due to the interfacial dissipation processes. Critically, it is the rate of change of the interfacial dissipation with velocity that matters, partial derivative Delta G(diss-total)/partial derivative nu, and not the absolute magnitude of the dissipation, Delta G(diss-total) for transformation stasis. (C) 2017 Acta Materialia Inc. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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