Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry

Martensitic steels are tempered to increase the toughness of the metastable martensite, which is brittle in the as-quenched state, and to achieve a more stable microstructure. During the tempering of steels, several particular overlapping effects can arise. Classical dilatometric investigations can...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Martin Hunkel, Juan Dong, Jeremy Epp, Daniel Kaiser, Stefan Dietrich, Volker Schulze, Ali Rajaei, Bengt Hallstedt, Christoph Broeckmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-11-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/22/5058
id doaj-669948a32fc34ebea6d2ee4c1062eacd
record_format Article
spelling doaj-669948a32fc34ebea6d2ee4c1062eacd2020-11-25T03:57:00ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442020-11-01135058505810.3390/ma13225058Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and DilatometryMartin Hunkel0Juan Dong1Jeremy Epp2Daniel Kaiser3Stefan Dietrich4Volker Schulze5Ali Rajaei6Bengt Hallstedt7Christoph Broeckmann8Leibniz Institut für Werkstofforientierte Technologien–IWT, Badgasteiner Straße 3, 28359 Bremen, GermanyLeibniz Institut für Werkstofforientierte Technologien–IWT, Badgasteiner Straße 3, 28359 Bremen, GermanyLeibniz Institut für Werkstofforientierte Technologien–IWT, Badgasteiner Straße 3, 28359 Bremen, GermanyInstitut für angewandte Materialien-Werkstoffkunde, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie, Engelbert-Arnold-Str. 4, 76131 Karlsruhe, GermanyInstitut für angewandte Materialien-Werkstoffkunde, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie, Engelbert-Arnold-Str. 4, 76131 Karlsruhe, GermanyInstitut für angewandte Materialien-Werkstoffkunde, Karlsruher Institut für Technologie, Engelbert-Arnold-Str. 4, 76131 Karlsruhe, GermanyInstitut für Werkstoffanwendungen im Maschinenbau, RWTH Aachen University, Augustinerbach 4, 52062 Aachen, GermanyInstitut für Werkstoffanwendungen im Maschinenbau, RWTH Aachen University, Augustinerbach 4, 52062 Aachen, GermanyInstitut für Werkstoffanwendungen im Maschinenbau, RWTH Aachen University, Augustinerbach 4, 52062 Aachen, GermanyMartensitic steels are tempered to increase the toughness of the metastable martensite, which is brittle in the as-quenched state, and to achieve a more stable microstructure. During the tempering of steels, several particular overlapping effects can arise. Classical dilatometric investigations can only detect effects by monitoring the integral length change of the sample. Additional in-situ diffractometry allowed a differentiation of the individual effects such as transformation of retained austenite and formation of cementite during tempering. Additionally, the lattice parameters of martensite and therefrom the tetragonality was analyzed. Two low-alloy steels with carbon contents of 0.4 and 1.0 wt.% and a high-alloy 5Cr-1Mo-steel with 0.4 wt.% carbon were investigated by dilatometry and in-situ diffractometry. In this paper, microstructural effects during tempering of the investigated steels are discussed by a comparative study of dilatometric and diffractometric experiments. The influence of the chemical composition on the tempering behavior is illustrated by comparing the determined effects of the three steels. The kinetics of tempering is similar for the low-alloy steels and shifted to much higher temperatures for the high-alloy steel. During tempering, the tetragonality of martensite in the steel with 1.0 wt% carbon shifts towards a low carbon behavior, as in the steels with 0.4 wt.% carbon.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/22/5058steeltemperingdilatometryin-situ diffractometry
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Martin Hunkel
Juan Dong
Jeremy Epp
Daniel Kaiser
Stefan Dietrich
Volker Schulze
Ali Rajaei
Bengt Hallstedt
Christoph Broeckmann
spellingShingle Martin Hunkel
Juan Dong
Jeremy Epp
Daniel Kaiser
Stefan Dietrich
Volker Schulze
Ali Rajaei
Bengt Hallstedt
Christoph Broeckmann
Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry
Materials
steel
tempering
dilatometry
in-situ diffractometry
author_facet Martin Hunkel
Juan Dong
Jeremy Epp
Daniel Kaiser
Stefan Dietrich
Volker Schulze
Ali Rajaei
Bengt Hallstedt
Christoph Broeckmann
author_sort Martin Hunkel
title Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry
title_short Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry
title_full Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry
title_fullStr Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry
title_full_unstemmed Comparative Study of the Tempering Behavior of Different Martensitic Steels by Means of In-Situ Diffractometry and Dilatometry
title_sort comparative study of the tempering behavior of different martensitic steels by means of in-situ diffractometry and dilatometry
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2020-11-01
description Martensitic steels are tempered to increase the toughness of the metastable martensite, which is brittle in the as-quenched state, and to achieve a more stable microstructure. During the tempering of steels, several particular overlapping effects can arise. Classical dilatometric investigations can only detect effects by monitoring the integral length change of the sample. Additional in-situ diffractometry allowed a differentiation of the individual effects such as transformation of retained austenite and formation of cementite during tempering. Additionally, the lattice parameters of martensite and therefrom the tetragonality was analyzed. Two low-alloy steels with carbon contents of 0.4 and 1.0 wt.% and a high-alloy 5Cr-1Mo-steel with 0.4 wt.% carbon were investigated by dilatometry and in-situ diffractometry. In this paper, microstructural effects during tempering of the investigated steels are discussed by a comparative study of dilatometric and diffractometric experiments. The influence of the chemical composition on the tempering behavior is illustrated by comparing the determined effects of the three steels. The kinetics of tempering is similar for the low-alloy steels and shifted to much higher temperatures for the high-alloy steel. During tempering, the tetragonality of martensite in the steel with 1.0 wt% carbon shifts towards a low carbon behavior, as in the steels with 0.4 wt.% carbon.
topic steel
tempering
dilatometry
in-situ diffractometry
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/13/22/5058
work_keys_str_mv AT martinhunkel comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT juandong comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT jeremyepp comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT danielkaiser comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT stefandietrich comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT volkerschulze comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT alirajaei comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT bengthallstedt comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
AT christophbroeckmann comparativestudyofthetemperingbehaviorofdifferentmartensiticsteelsbymeansofinsitudiffractometryanddilatometry
_version_ 1724462505231646720