6 research outputs found

    Anisotropy in mechanical properties and fracture behavior of an oxide dispersion Fe20Cr5Al alloy

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    Anisotropy of fracture toughness and fracture behavior of Fe20Cr5Al oxide dispersion-strengthened alloy has been investigated by means of compression tests, hardness tests, and wedge splitting test. The results show a small effect of the compression direction on yield strength (YS) and strain hardening. The YS is minimum for longitudinal direction and maximum for the tangential direction. The transverse plastic strain ratio is similar for tangential and longitudinal directions but very different from that in normal direction. Hardness depends on the indentation plane; it is lower for any plane parallel to the L-T plane and of similar magnitude for the other orthogonal planes, i.e., the L-S and T-S planes. Macroscopically, two failure modes have been observed after wedge-splitting tests, those of LS and TS specimens in which fracture deviates along one or two branches normal to the notch plane, and those of LT, TL, SL, and ST specimens in which fracture propagates along the notch plane. Besides LT and TL specimens present delaminations parallel to L-T plane. Both, the fracture surface of branching cracks and that of the delaminations, show an intergranular brittle fracture appearance. It is proposed that the main cause of the delamination and crack branching is the alignment in the mesoscopic scale of the ultrafine grains structure which is enhanced by the 〈110〉- texture of the material and by the presence in the grain boundaries of both yttria dispersoids and impurity contaminations. An elastoplastic finite element analysis was performed to study what stress state is the cause of the branches and delaminations. It is concluded that the normal to the crack branches and/or the shear stress components could determine the crack bifurcation mechanism, whereas the delamination it seems that it is controlled by the magnitude of the stress component normal to the delamination plane. © The Minerals, Metals & Materials Society and ASM International 2014.Peer Reviewe

    FRACTURE-TOUGHNESS ANALYSIS OF HEAT-AFFECTED ZONES IN HIGH-STRENGTH LOW-ALLOY STEEL WELDS

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    This study is concerned with a correlation of fracture toughness with microstructural factors in heat-affected zones (HAZs) of a normalized high-strength low-alloy (HSLA) steel. In order to explain weld joint performance, tensile and plane strain fracture toughness tests were conducted for the simulated coarse-grained HAZ microstructures. The micromechanisms of fracture processes involved in void and microcrack formation are identified by in situ scanning electron microscopy (SEM) fracture observations and void initiation study. The fracture toughness results are also interpreted using simple fracture initiation models founded on the basic assumption that a crack initiates at a certain critical strain or stress developed over some microstructurally significant distance. The calculated K(Ic). values are found to scale roughly with the spacing of the stringer-type martensite islands associated with voids, confirming that martensite islands play an important role in reducing the toughness of the coarse-grained HAZs. These findings suggest that the formation of martensite islands should be prevented by controlling the chemical compositions and by using the proper welding conditions to enhance fracture toughness of the welded joints of the HSLA steel.X1112sciescopu
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