Abstract
The work presents results on the effect of prior martensite formation on bainite transformation kinetics in a 3% medium-Mn multiphase steel. The material was subjected to two isothermal holding temperatures: 400 °C (without martensite) and 350 °C (with prior martensite). According to obtained dilatometric results, the formation of prior martensite leads to the acceleration of bainite transformation kinetics. The bainite formation starts and finishes much faster, when the prior martensite was present before the isothermal holding. The microstructural investigation of the steel after heat treatment was carried out using light and scanning electron microscopy. The microstructures were composed of fine bainitic laths with retained austenite and small amount of martensitic-austenitic islands at 400 °C. At 350 °C the presence of large tempered martensite laths was detected. The bainite is composed of a mixture of fine and coarse laths. The increase of the bainitic lath thickness is attributed to the coalescence process occurring at the lower holding temperature. The differences in the steel hardness after the two heat treatments were relatively small (~ 13 HV10).
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Introduction
Ultrafine-grained multiphase steels with a microstructure composed of carbide-free bainitic ferrite laths and retained austenite have received recently much attention due to their superior mechanical properties. These steels have the application potential in the automotive industry, machine industry and others, where high strength in combination with good plasticity and high toughness are needed [1,2,3]. The thickness of bainite laths depends on the chemical composition of steel and heat treatment parameters. These factors affect the driving force for bainitic transformation and eventual stabilization of retained austenite [4,5,6,7]. The ultra-fine bainitic microstructure is usually obtained via isothermal treatment at a temperature about 300 °C, above martensite start temperature (Ms). In order to provide the most effective grain refinement effect, the austempering process should be performed at the lowest temperature as possible. To reduce the Ms temperature, bainitic steels usually contain higher carbon contents of 0.6–0.9 mass/%C, which deteriorate the toughness and weldability of steel [8, 9]. Moreover, lowering the isothermal holding temperature requires long duration of bainitic transformation, which significantly reduce their industrial application. The decrease in carbon content causes an increase in the driving force for bainitic transformation and thus it allows to reduce the duration of the austempering process [10,11,12]. However, low-carbon steels are characterized by a higher Ms temperature; thus the application of conventional low-temperature austempering process is not feasible [13, 14].
Some research concerning the effects of austempering temperatures above Ms or below Ms on the microstructure and the kinetics of isothermal transformation in low-carbon bainitic steels are available in the literature [4, 15,16,17]. Zhao et al. [16] reported that ausforming followed by austempering carried out for Fe–0.15C–1.88Mn–1.88Cr–1.41Si steel at a temperature below Ms allows to refine bainitic laths and decreases the amount of unfavorable martensitic-austenitic (MA) constituents. Moreover, the significant increase in the fraction of retained austenite was noted. For the isothermal holding temperatures above Ms, they observed the increased fraction of brittle blocky MA grains. Van Bohemen et al. [17] investigated the isothermal decomposition of austenite below Ms temperature in Fe–0.66C–0.69Mn steel. They noted the isothermal decomposition of austenite and formation of bainite below Ms temperature. Guo et al. [15] observed that the prior martensite accelerates the low-temperature bainitic transformation. As a result the incubation period and completion time of the bainite reaction were significantly reduced. It was related to the formation of prior martensite and successive carbon partitioning between it and remaining austenite. Formation of martensite increases the intensity of bainite nucleation due to strain introduced in austenite. The effect of transformation temperature below and above Ms on the bainitic transformation kinetics in Fe–0.22C–2.0Mn–1.8Si–1.0Cr–0.5Al–0.25Mo was also analyzed by Tian et al. [4]. They observed finer bainite laths for specimens austempered at a temperature below Ms. Interestingly, the most beneficial mechanical properties were noted for specimens austempered above Ms temperature (at 400 °C).
In this work, an Al-containing 3.3% medium-Mn steel was subjected to austempering carried out below Ms temperature (350 °C) and above Ms temperature (400 °C). Using the increased Mn content enables lowering the Bs and Ms temperatures and it counteracts the opposite effects of Al addition and relatively low C content. The aim of the treatment at 350 °C was to induce a partial martensitic transformation in the austenite microstructure before the isothermal bainitic transformation start. The effect of martensite formation on the kinetics of bainitic transformation and microstructure-hardness relationship was analyzed.
Material and experimental procedure
The investigation concerned austempering of 3.3 mass/% Mn, 0.17 mass/% C, 1.6 mass/% Al, 0.23 mass/% Mo and 0.22 mass/% Si medium-Mn steel. The material after casting was forged in a temperature range of 1200–900 °C. Cylindrical samples with 4 mm diameter and 10 mm length for dilatometric investigations were cut from the forged 22 mm thick plates. The heat treatment has been conducted using a BAHR DIL 805 A/D dilatometer. The experiments were conducted in vacuum (during heating, austenization and austempering) and helium was used for cooling. The temperature was measured by an S-type thermocouple welded to the central part of the sample. The dilatometry data was analyzed according to ASTM A1033-04. The applied heat treatment consisted of austenitization of the material at 1100 °C for 5 min. The addition of Al in the investigated steel extends the intercritical region [18]; therefore, an elevated temperature and time were chosen to ensure full austenization and complete temperature homogenization in the whole sample. Next, the samples were cooled at the rate of 60 °C s−1 to two austempering temperatures: 400–350 °C. As the bulk material Ms temperature is ~ 390 °C, the one temperature is slightly above Ms, while the second one is lower than the bulk Ms. It was designed to induce partial martensitic transformation before the bainitic transformation starts. After reaching the austempering temperatures, the samples were held for 10–15 min at each temperature to perform the isothermal bainitic transformation. Finally, the samples were slowly cooled (1 °C s−1) to room temperature. A sketch summarizing the described heat treatments is shown in Fig. 1. The Ms temperature of the initial material was determined by tangent method from a dilatometric curve of sample quenched from 1100 °C.
After the heat treatment completion, the samples were cut perpendicularly to the sample length in half and prepared according to typical metallographic procedures: griding up to SiC paper 2000; polishing using 3–1 µm diamond pastes and final etching using nital. The microstructure investigation was conducted using light (Zeiss, AxioObserver) and scanning electron (FEG-SEM, JEOL Ltd–secondary electron mode) microscopy. The theoretical calculations of phase transformation during cooling from the austenitization temperature and isothermal holding were carried out using JMatPro ver. 13, general steel module [19]. The hardness of the samples was measured using Vickers method with 100 N load and dwelling time of 15 s.
Results and discussion
To analyze the phase transformation kinetics, heat treatment simulations were firstly carried out, which are presented in Fig. 2. The simulations of cooling from the austenitization temperature (Fig. 2a) show that the martensite transformation starts at ca. 370 °C. This means that at 400 °C no prior martensite should be present before bainitic transformation. At 350 °C the martensite formation stops and the austenite undergoes bainitic transformation. Figure 2b shows the change of the bainitic transformation kinetics depending on an isothermal temperature. According to it, the 400 °C microstructure should be composed of 100% bainite, and no austenite undergoes martensite transformation. At 350 °C the amount of bainite should be smaller due to the lower remaining austenite fraction before the isothermal holding step. In both cases the calculations don’t show the formation of fresh martensite during final cooling to room temperature. Another issue is a rate of bainitic transformation. Analyzing the beginning of the dilatation curve (the black square in Fig. 2b), at 400 °C the transformation starts few seconds earlier compared to the 350 °C holding. This is the result of change in a diffusion rate at the lower temperature. At the lower temperatures the bainite transformation needs more time to start, which is reported as higher incubation time [11].
The dilatometric results are presented in Fig. 3. As expected the dilatation responses of samples held at 400 °C do not exhibit any disturbances on the curves, while in samples 350_10/15 after reaching ~ 390 °C, a rapid increase in relative change of length (RCL) is visible, which is characteristic for the martensitic transformation.
Figure 4 presents calculations of martensite and bainite fractions formed during cooling to the isothermal holding step and successive bainitic transformation, respectively. The martensite transformation starts at about 370 °C, where 2.5% of martensite is formed. At 350 °C where the isothermal holding is conducted, the martensite amount is ca. 35%. At the same time, the formation of bainite takes place and at the end of transformation ca. 65% of this phase should occur in the microstructure. Note that according to the calculations, during final cooling none of the samples showed martensitic transformation, which means full stabilization of the remaining austenite.
Figure 5 is focused on the bainitic transformation influence on relative change in length (RCL) as a function of time. Results for both samples for each temperature variant show good consistency. For the medium manganese steels it is important to validate each result since such steels are prone to microsegregation [20, 21], which could disturb the consistency of dilatometric results.
The RCL during bainitic transformation of both samples treated at 400 °C is about 0.52% (Fig. 5, Table 1). For the samples treated at 350 °C their values are lower by ~ 20%. In general, the RCL value increases with a decrease in the austempering temperature as more bainite is formed [22]. In the presented case, however, the initial martensitic transformation occurred which consumed some fraction of austenite and thus it limited the possible extend of bainitic transformation. The martensite present during austempering undergoes further tempering causing additional, small contraction of the sample [23]. It is noticeable in Fig. 5 that, regardless of the transformation T, 10 min is suffice for the bainitic transformation to reach its end, characterized by a RCL plateau. Usually low-temperature austempering of conventional bainitic steels requires much longer holding times [24]. The investigated material contains the increased content of Mn, which delays bainitic transformation. However, the large addition of aluminum (1.6 mass/%) ensures short duration of the process [11]. The reason of Al addition is to prevent the carbide precipitation in bainite [15, 25], but what is more important for the transformation kinetics, it accelerates significantly the bainitic reaction by increasing the free energy change for the transformation. For the samples 400_10/15, the transformation began after ~ 30 s as it is indicated by the 10% of the total transformation RCL (T10%, Table 1), and finished after ~ 150 s as indicated by 90% of total transformation RCL (T90%). For the sample with some initial martensite, despite lower austempering temperature, those times were significantly shortened as the bainitic transformation began almost immediately (0.5 s) and finished in 90% after ~ 87 s. This result shows some discrepancy between simulations results presented in Fig. 2b, where the incubation for the 350 °C experiments is higher that at 400 °C. This is very likely to be related to the fact that the used software does not take into account how the transformation rate is affected by for example the strain field introduced during martensitic transformation, or the presence of martensite plates that can act as autocatalytic sites for bainitic transformation. According to Guo et al. [4], the increase in a number of preferential nucleation sites caused by the martensite formation accelerates the bainitic transformation. It is associated both with the interfacial energy between preexisting martensite and austenite and the dislocations introduced into the austenite by the formation of martensite and the higher resulting driving force for the transformation [26, 27].
For conventional austempering, bainite starts nucleating on the austenite grain boundaries and grow into the grain (Fig. 6), with the accompaniment of the carbon diffusion from bainitic ferrite laths (\(\alpha_{{\text{B}}}\)) to austenite (γ). After the carbon concentration in the surrounding austenite reaches a certain level, the transformation stops as the free energy values of both phases are equal [28]. For samples with the initial martensite, the formed martensitic needles generate some volume expansion and thus increase the dislocation density in surrounding austenite. Such conditions allow for nucleation of bainite in numerous places, which accelerates the entire transformation.
The microstructure of steel after the heat treatment is shown in Fig. 7. The selected time (10 min) of isothermal holding is only shown as there was no differences in case of 15 min holding. According to the microstructure obtained at 400 °C, the main structural constituent is bainitic ferrite with some fractions of retained austenite and martensitic-austenitic (MA) islands. The amount of MA constituents is very small (< 2%), as their formation was not detected during the dilatometric analysis. The presence of MA in steel austempered above Ms temperature was reported by Zhao et al. [16]. It is usually formed from blocky low C-enriched austenite. At 350 °C, the microstructure contains also the tempered martensite as a result of the prior martensite tempering. Comparing both microstructures, one can see that the 400 °C treatments lead to fine, uniform microstructures of bainitic ferrite laths and retained austenite. The lower temperature exhibits large tempered martensite laths and a mixture of fine and coarse bainitic laths. The big laths could be the result of the coalescence process as reported by Bhadeshia [28]. According to the work, at temperatures below 400 °C, the driving force is high enough to start the coalescence process of the bainite.
According to the measurements presented in Fig. 8, the change of the hardness between the treatments is relatively small. The 350 °C isothermal holding exhibits slightly higher hardness of 380 HV10, which is the result of the tempered martensite presence in the microstructure. The tempered martensite exhibits higher strength compared to bainite increasing slightly the steel hardness. The longer time of isothermal holding results in some decrease in the hardness. This could be due to the more intense carbon diffusion into austenite at 400 °C, which decreases the bainite saturation in carbon and hardness at the same time. Moreover, the higher tempering effect of martensite occurring at 350 °C results in some decrease in its tetragonality, what further decreases the hardness. Moreover, in both cases, longer times result in the small increase of bainite lath thickness, which could further contribute to some hardness decrease at both temperatures [5].
Conclusions
The effect of prior martensite formation on the successive isothermal bainite transformation kinetics was investigated in multiphase 3% Mn steel. Based on the results obtained and analysis of the bainite transformation kinetics at temperatures above and below Ms the following conclusions were drawn:
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The formation of prior martensite has high impact on the bainite transformation kinetics in the 3% Mn multiphase steel. When some martensite fraction was formed at 350 °C the bainitic transformation starts much faster compared to the 400 °C treatment. The incubation time decreased rapidly from 29 to 0.6 s, and the transformation finished twice faster.
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At 400 °C the microstructure is composed of fine lath-type bainite with retained austenite, whereas at 350 °C the tempered martensite is additionally present and the bainite has a mixed morphology of small and big laths. The increase in size could be the result of coalescence of the bainite at the lower temperature.
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The difference in hardness is neglectable between the heat treatments. The highest hardness of 380 HV10 is exhibited by the 350 °C-10 min sample. This is the result of the presence of tempered martensite.
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The acceleration of the bainite formation kinetics by prior martensite can be used in medium manganese steels to decrease the isothermal heat treatment time.
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Acknowledgements
A. Kozłowska acknowledges the financial support of the Silesian University of Technology, Faculty of Mechanical Engineering through the 10/010/BKM_22/1104 project.
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MM and AG contributed to the study conception and design. Material preparation, data collection and analysis were performed by MM, CGM, AS and AK. The first draft of the manuscript was written by MM and AS. Initial review was carried out by AG, CGM and AK. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.
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Morawiec, M., Skowronek, A., Kozłowska, A. et al. Effect of prior martensite formation on the bainite transformation kinetics in high-strength 3% Mn multiphase steel. J Therm Anal Calorim 148, 1365–1371 (2023). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10973-022-11729-2
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10973-022-11729-2