Journal of Materials Research and Technology (Jan 2021)

Influence of warm caliber rolling on tensile response and high cycle fatigue behavior of hypereutectoid steel

  • Kyu-Sik Kim,
  • Young-Kyun Kim,
  • Hyeon-Jin Kim,
  • Jeoung Han Kim,
  • Kee-Ahn Lee

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10
pp. 205 – 215

Abstract

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The effects of severe plastic deformation on the microstructural evolution, tensile and high cycle fatigue properties of warm caliber-rolled hypereutectoid steels were investigated. As the reduction in area, associated with amount of plastic deformation of 0, 38, 57 and 81%, increased in caliber-rolled steels, strain accumulation was observed near interfaces between cementite and ferrite in pearlite structures. Initial pearlite structures were changed to spheroidized cementite and submicron-sized polygonal ferrite by dynamic recrystallization according to the warm caliber rolling process. The initial hypereutectoid steel had a yield strength of 375 MPa, tensile strength of 850 MPa, and elongation of 16.8%. As the rolling strain increased, yield and tensile strength increased dramatically to 1381 and 1604 MPa, respectively. The fracture elongation of the 57% reduction in area (RA) sample decreased to 5.4%. However, it is noteworthy that the total elongation of the 81% RA sample increased slightly to 7.1%. The fatigue limit was also enhanced from 450 MPa for initial hypereutectoid steel to 850 MPa for 81% RA without decreasing the fatigue strength ratio (σfatigue limit/σUTS, 0.53). The 81% RA sample had superior fatigue crack propagation resistance and a high tensile strength–elongation combination compared to that of the initial pearlitic hypereutectoid steel.

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