Study on the microstructure and impact fracture behavior of martensitic alloy steels ZHENG, Z. B., LONG, J., ZHENG, K. H., ZHOU, H. L., LI, H., ZHANG, Q. L. vol. 57 (2019), no. 3, pp. 189 - 197 DOI: 10.4149/km_2019_3_189
Abstract Martensitic steels used for ball mill liners were prepared. The effect of tempering on the microstructures, Rockwell hardness, and impact toughness of the tested steels was evaluated at room temperature. The fracture morphologies were observed by using metallurgical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy and energy-dispersive spectroscopy. The results showed that tempering decreased the Rockwell hardness and significantly improved the impact toughness of the tested steel. However, the impact toughness of the tempered steels was unstable. Fracture of the tested steel before tempering was quasi-cleavage fracture; however, it changed to ductile and quasi-cleavage fracture after tempering. Carbide segregations formed at the local grain boundaries became the crack source and were the preferred ways for crack propagation during the impact test. The existence of segregations was inferred to be the main reason for the fluctuation of impact toughness. Key words martensitic steel, tempering, mechanical properties, fracture Full text (1631 KB)
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