4.6 Article

Strain Rate Dependent Ductility and Strain Hardening in Q&P Steels

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SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11661-020-06127-y

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  1. Advanced Steel Processing and Products Research Center (ASPPRC), an industry-university cooperative research center at the Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO
  2. National Science Foundation division of Civil, Mechanical and Manufacturing Innovation (NSF-CMMI) [1752530]
  3. Directorate For Engineering
  4. Div Of Civil, Mechanical, & Manufact Inn [1752530] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Q&P steels have the potential to reduce vehicle mass and energy consumption, enhancing ductility and strain hardening through DIMT. Precise control of austenite stability is crucial for improving mechanical performance. Increasing strain rates may lead to reduced uniform elongation and a need to balance competing effects for further optimization.
Due to their high strength, formability and affordable cost, quenched and partitioned (Q&P) steels have shown the potential to reduce the mass of vehicles, thereby decreasing fuel consumption during service. Furthermore, because a lower mass of steel is used in each vehicle, energy consumption associated with the steelmaking process is also reduced. Q&P steels utilize the deformation-induced martensitic transformation (DIMT) of metastable retained austenite to enhance ductility and strain hardening. Accordingly, improvement of mechanical performance is contingent on the ability to precisely control the chemical and mechanical stability of austenite. Considering the multitude of factors that influence austenite stability, optimizing microstructures to delay necking or fracture is challenging, particularly as temperature and strain rate increase. Tensile tests of an intercritically annealed C-Mn-Si Q&P steel were performed over a range of strain rates (10(-4) to 10(-1) s(-1)) to evaluate effects on the DIMT and sheet tensile properties. As strain rates increased from 10(-4) to 10(-1) s(-1), the uniform elongation decreased from approximately 19 to 14 pct. This reduction in uniform elongation is associated with a decrease in the strain hardening exponent near the onset of strain localization. Based on experimental data from this study and review of previous research, it is postulated that the strengthening contribution of DIMT is controlled by competing effects of: (i) a decreasing chemical driving force for DIMT caused by deformation-induced heat accumulation at higher strain rates and (ii) an increasing number of martensite nucleation sites. This suggests that tailoring austenite stability for specific deformation conditions could enable further optimization of formability and vehicle crash behavior.

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