Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys

Carbon distribution in Fe-Cr-C alloys with a variety of Cr concentrations is studied based on internal friction, optical and transmission-electron microscopy. It is found that the carbon distribution strongly depends on initial microstructure, being ferritic or ferritic/martensitic, which is determined by the thermal treatment, and Cr and carbon concentrations. In the quenched alloys, carbon is observed in the form of small carbon-vacancy complexes, most probably two carbon - single vacancy cluster, 2CV, that dissolve at about 500 K. In tempered alloys, the carbon atoms are observed to be uniformly distributed only in Fe-2.5Cr-C alloy, which is fully ferrite. In the alloys with 5-12% of Cr, with ferritic/martensitic microstructure, carbon-Snoek relaxation peak is not observed due to the carbon precipitation, as well as due to atomic carbon being trapped at dislocations and grain boundaries. In both quenched and tempered alloys, the plastic deformation causes the appearance of the broad relaxation peak close to 300 K which could be assigned to dissolution of single carbon - single vacancy, CV, complexes.

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Main Authors: Konstantinović,Milan Jovan, Minov,Boris, Renterghem,Wouter Van
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: ABM, ABC, ABPol 2018
Online Access:http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-14392018000800205
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spelling oai:scielo:S1516-143920180008002052018-05-24Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C AlloysKonstantinović,Milan JovanMinov,BorisRenterghem,Wouter Van Fe-Cr-C alloys internal friction ferritic-martensitic microstructure Carbon distribution in Fe-Cr-C alloys with a variety of Cr concentrations is studied based on internal friction, optical and transmission-electron microscopy. It is found that the carbon distribution strongly depends on initial microstructure, being ferritic or ferritic/martensitic, which is determined by the thermal treatment, and Cr and carbon concentrations. In the quenched alloys, carbon is observed in the form of small carbon-vacancy complexes, most probably two carbon - single vacancy cluster, 2CV, that dissolve at about 500 K. In tempered alloys, the carbon atoms are observed to be uniformly distributed only in Fe-2.5Cr-C alloy, which is fully ferrite. In the alloys with 5-12% of Cr, with ferritic/martensitic microstructure, carbon-Snoek relaxation peak is not observed due to the carbon precipitation, as well as due to atomic carbon being trapped at dislocations and grain boundaries. In both quenched and tempered alloys, the plastic deformation causes the appearance of the broad relaxation peak close to 300 K which could be assigned to dissolution of single carbon - single vacancy, CV, complexes.info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccessABM, ABC, ABPolMaterials Research v.21 suppl.2 20182018-01-01info:eu-repo/semantics/articletext/htmlhttp://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-14392018000800205en10.1590/1980-5373-mr-2017-0886
institution SCIELO
collection OJS
country Brasil
countrycode BR
component Revista
access En linea
databasecode rev-scielo-br
tag revista
region America del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Konstantinović,Milan Jovan
Minov,Boris
Renterghem,Wouter Van
spellingShingle Konstantinović,Milan Jovan
Minov,Boris
Renterghem,Wouter Van
Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys
author_facet Konstantinović,Milan Jovan
Minov,Boris
Renterghem,Wouter Van
author_sort Konstantinović,Milan Jovan
title Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys
title_short Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys
title_full Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys
title_fullStr Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys
title_full_unstemmed Carbon Distribution in Ferritic-Martensitic Fe-Cr-C Alloys
title_sort carbon distribution in ferritic-martensitic fe-cr-c alloys
description Carbon distribution in Fe-Cr-C alloys with a variety of Cr concentrations is studied based on internal friction, optical and transmission-electron microscopy. It is found that the carbon distribution strongly depends on initial microstructure, being ferritic or ferritic/martensitic, which is determined by the thermal treatment, and Cr and carbon concentrations. In the quenched alloys, carbon is observed in the form of small carbon-vacancy complexes, most probably two carbon - single vacancy cluster, 2CV, that dissolve at about 500 K. In tempered alloys, the carbon atoms are observed to be uniformly distributed only in Fe-2.5Cr-C alloy, which is fully ferrite. In the alloys with 5-12% of Cr, with ferritic/martensitic microstructure, carbon-Snoek relaxation peak is not observed due to the carbon precipitation, as well as due to atomic carbon being trapped at dislocations and grain boundaries. In both quenched and tempered alloys, the plastic deformation causes the appearance of the broad relaxation peak close to 300 K which could be assigned to dissolution of single carbon - single vacancy, CV, complexes.
publisher ABM, ABC, ABPol
publishDate 2018
url http://old.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S1516-14392018000800205
work_keys_str_mv AT konstantinovicmilanjovan carbondistributioninferriticmartensiticfecrcalloys
AT minovboris carbondistributioninferriticmartensiticfecrcalloys
AT renterghemwoutervan carbondistributioninferriticmartensiticfecrcalloys
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