Improving the strength and ductility of reduced activation ferritic/martensitic steel by cold-swaging and post-annealing

Swaging Hardening (computing) Ductility (Earth science) Strain hardening exponent Precipitation hardening
DOI: 10.1016/j.msea.2015.02.044 Publication Date: 2015-02-25T19:48:26Z
ABSTRACT
Abstract A new process to produce ultrafine-grained reduced activation ferritic/martensitic steel was developed by cold-swaging and post-annealing. Microstructural examinations showed that the martensitic structures were broken into subgrain structures, and the rod-like carbides were fragmented after cold-swaging process with the cumulative strain of ~2.8. The tensile strength significantly increased accompanied by a reduction in the ductility in the cold-swaged samples, which was due to the insufficient strain hardening ability. After post-annealing at 973 K, a stable ultrafine-grained structure with uniformly distributed nanoprecipitates was obtained. The presence of uniformly distributed nanoprecipitates not only provided an effective precipitation strengthening but also improved the strain hardening ability, resulting in higher strength and better ductility than their as-tempered counterparts.
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