Journal of Materials Research and Technology (May 2024)
Study on the grain evolution of austenitic steel for nuclear power during hot working based on large area EBSD mapping
Abstract
To address the issue of non-standard grain sizes and difficult control of uniformity in the manufacturing of large, complex-shaped nuclear power pipelines. In this paper, double wedge-shaped samples of X2 CrNiMo 18.12 (CN) austenitic stainless steel were hot deformed at 1000 °C, 1100 °C, and 1180 °C to obtain deformation samples with a gradient strain, and the deformation sample at 1180 °C was subjected to solid solution treatment at 1060 °C × 4 h (water quenching; the measured cooling rate of water cooling was approximately 4400 °C/min). Large-area electron backscattered diffraction mapping technology was used to characterize the 80 mm × 5 mm full-area range of samples. The initiation sequence of various dynamic recrystallization mechanisms and the grain evolution under continuous effective strain conditions at a hot deformation temperature of 1000–1180 °C were investigated. The influence of the hot deformation process parameters on the grains after solid solution treatment was examined, the process interval for the generation of severe mixed grains was determined. The results show that the recrystallization behavior of X2 CrNiMo 18.12 (CN) austenitic stainless steel is mainly determined by a combination of recrystallization mechanisms dominated by discontinuous dynamic recrystallization, supplemented by continuous dynamic recrystallization, twinning-induced dynamic recrystallization, and geometrical dynamic recrystallization during the hot deformation process at 1000–1180 °C. The effective strain intervals of the solid solution sample that produces severely mixed grains are in the range of 0.11–0.22 mm/mm, with the probability of producing severely mixed grains with an effective strain in the range of 0.13–0.14 mm/mm reaching 74%.