Processing of harmonic type DP microstructures in the given steel and investigating deformation behavior through tensile testing and also by modelling-simulation.
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
Dual phase steels (DP steels) consist of martensite phase (hard phase to impart high strength) and
ferrite phase (soft phase to provide elongation). These steels have been widely used in
automobile units because of their good mechanical properties providing good strength-ductility
combination. Now-a-days, research has focused on development of DP steels with lean
composition. Parallel to this, new processing techniques have also been developed to control the
microstructure evolution which further improves the strength-ductility combination. Controlled
annealing is one of the techniques used to alter the ferrite-martensite morphology of DP steels
with lean composition. The present dissertation work was an attempt to extend the concept of
harmonic structure design on the microstructure of DP steels and to investigate its effect on the
strength-ductility combination of the steels. In the present work, harmonic structures were
developed in DP steels having soft-shell of ferrite phase (three-dimensional network structure)
surrounding the hard-core martensite phase. Five different annealing cycles were used to get
distinct DP microstructures having different martensite distribution and volume fraction. These
five different cycles belonged to two broad annealing categories (i) Continuous Annealing Line
(CAL process) and (ii) Core and Shell (CAS process). The tensile properties of steels with these
different DP microstructures were evaluated using tensile testing. Experimental results showed
that strength of steels increased with increase in martensite volume fraction in the DP
microstructure. Also, for the dual phase steels with harmonic structure, steels containing higher
martensite fraction and typical core and shell type microstructure showed very limited microcracking
of martensite in the tensile necking zone. Further, ferrite-martensite interface and
martensite inter-lath damage activity was restricted and both ferrite and martensite revealed
plastic strain compatibility. In the second major part of this dissertation work, microstructures
obtained by CAL and CAS (only one out of the four microstructures processed by CAS) routes
were successfully modelled using Dream.3D software. Further, simulation results using Abaqus
software were able to appropriately predict the deformation behavior of DP steels. Good
agreement between predicted simulation results and experimental results was observed with
regards to deformation behavior shown by different DP steels.
