Retained Austenite Stability and Impact Performance of Advanced High Strength Steel at Reduced Temperatures

Authors Abstract
Content
Retained austenite stability to both mechanically induced transformation and athermal transformation is of great importance to the fabrication and in-vehicle performance of automotive advanced high strength steels. Selected cold-rolled advanced high strength steels containing retained austenite with minimum tensile strengths of 980 MPa and 1180 MPa were pre-strained to pre-determined levels under uniaxial tension in the rolling direction and subsequently cooled to temperatures as low as 77 K. Room temperature uniaxial tensile results of pre-strained and cooled steels indicate that retained austenite is stable to athermal transformation to martensite at all tested temperatures and pre-strain levels. To evaluate the combined effects of temperature and pre-strain on impact behavior, stacked Charpy impact testing was conducted on the same 980 MPa minimum tensile strength steel following similar pre-straining in uniaxial tension. A reduction in absorbed energy was observed with decreasing temperature and increasing pre-strain, indicating that thermal effects on plasticity, not athermal transformation to martensite, predominantly account for the observed reductions in impact energy at reduced temperatures.
Meta TagsDetails
DOI
https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-1707
Pages
7
Citation
Enloe, C., Coryell, J., and Wang, J., "Retained Austenite Stability and Impact Performance of Advanced High Strength Steel at Reduced Temperatures," SAE Int. J. Mater. Manf. 10(2):245-251, 2017, https://doi.org/10.4271/2017-01-1707.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Mar 28, 2017
Product Code
2017-01-1707
Content Type
Journal Article
Language
English