Utilizing inclusion data in characterization of oxide-sulfide stringers in hot-rolled plates

Abstract

Abstract The targets of this study were to determine the effect of vertical location and the composition of inclusions to the occurrence of oxide–sulfide stringers, and to determine the calcium aluminate phases most prone to form stringers during hot rolling of aluminium killed, calcium treated steel. The phases present in the inclusions have a significant effect on the deformation of inclusions during hot rolling, and consequently, on mechanical properties of the steel. A MATLAB script is utilized to identify and locate detrimental stringers from the hot rolled plates. Inclusion analysis data gathered with a scanning electron microscope and exported from IncaFeature software is analyzed. The following properties are presented for each stringer: the number of inclusions and length of stringer, phase fractions and compositions, and the composition of the unfragmented inclusion before hot rolling. According to the results, the longest stringers have total lengths over 200 µm, with almost 20 inclusions. The overall composition of the longest stringers is between C12A7 and C3A calcium aluminates with minor MgO contents. The diameters of the unfragmented inclusions in the slabs, forming stringers during hot rolling, were estimated to be around 20 µm for the longest stringers. From the dataset, plenty of CaO–CaS stringers were also characterized, obviously a result of excess calcium treatment

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