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Quantification and effects of microstructural dispersions on the mechanical behaviour of low carbon martensite

Proceedings of International Symposia on Steel Science 2024 1 citation ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count. Score: 35 ? 0–100 AI score estimating relevance to the microplastics field. Papers below 30 are filtered from public browse.
S. Allain Juan Macchi, Imed-Eddine Benrabah, Imed-Eddine Benrabah, Julien Teixeira, Guillaume Géandier, Sabine Denis, Frédéric Bonnet, Frédéric Bonnet, S. Allain

Summary

Researchers examined the mechanical behaviour of low-carbon martensitic steel, demonstrating that the sequential nature of the martensitic phase transformation from the Ms temperature to ambient temperature produces microstructural heterogeneities rather than a uniform phase. This reinterpretation — viewing lath martensite as a multiphase aggregate — helps explain paradoxical properties such as low microplasticity yield and strong initial hardening.

The mechanical properties of martensite have been extensively studied due to its technological significance. It is well-established that quenched martensite exhibits high mechanical strength but low total elongation and is often deemed as a "brittle" microstructure. However, its mechanical behaviour, including low microplasticity yield and strong initial hardening, resembles paradoxically that of multiphase steels. Consequently, recent research has led to a new perspective, proposing that lath martensite should no longer be viewed as a "uniform and homogeneous" phase but rather as a multiphase aggregate. This perspective arises from the recognition of the sequential nature of the martensitic phase transformation, progressing from the Ms temperature to ambient temperature. This progressive transformation results in the initial martensite laths transforming just below Ms in coarse, undeformed austenite, while subsequent laths transform in a highly constrained environment in terms of size, relaxation possibility, or defect densities. This progressive transformation serves as the primary explanation for the observed microstructural heterogeneities in martensitic steels.

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