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High Strain Rate and Stress-State-Dependent Martensite Transformation in AISI 304 at Low Temperatures

Metals 2022 10 citations ? Citation count from OpenAlex, updated daily. May differ slightly from the publisher's own count.
Lara Vivian Fricke, Gregory Gerstein, Andreas Kotzbauer, Bernd Breidenstein, Sebastian Barton, Hans Jürgen Maier

Summary

Researchers investigated deformation-induced martensitic transformation in AISI 304 austenitic steel under high strain rates (greater than 10^3 s^-1) and varying stress states at low temperatures relevant to cryogenic cutting applications. They found that higher strain rates under tensile loading decreased alpha-prime martensite content due to adiabatic heating, while shear stress conditions produced lath-like martensite morphology.

Deformation-induced martensitic transformation as the basis of a hardening process is dependent, among others, on the stress state. In applications such as cryogenic cutting, where a hardened martensitic subsurface can be produced in metastable austenitic steels, different stress states exist. Furthermore, cutting typically occurs at high strain rates greater than 103s−1. In order to gain a deeper insight into the behavior of a metastable austenitic steel (AISI 304) upon cryogenic cutting, the influence of high strain rates under different loading conditions was analyzed. It was observed that higher strain rates lead to a decrease in the α′-martensite content if exposed to tensile loads due to generated adiabatic heat. Furthermore, a lath-like α′-martensite was induced. Under shear stress, no suppression of α′-martensite formation by higher strain rates was found. A lath α′-martensite was formed, too. In the specimens that were subjected exclusively to compressive loading, almost no α′-martensite was present. The martensitic surface generated by cutting experiments showed deformation lines in which α′-martensite was formed in a wave-like shape. As for the shear specimens, more α′-martensite was formed with increasing strain rate, i.e., force. Additionally, magnetic etching proved to be an effective method to verify the transformation of ferromagnetic α′-martensite.

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