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    Mechanisms by which solute nitrogen affects phase transformations and mechanical properties of automotive dual-phase sheet steel, The

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    Author
    Brown, Tyson W.
    Advisor
    Speer, J. G.
    Date issued
    2014
    Date submitted
    2014
    Keywords
    phase transformations
    nitrogen
    mechanical properties
    dual-phase steel
    Cottrell atmospheres
    3D atom probe tomography
    Steel -- Nitrogen content
    Steel -- Microstructure
    Steel -- Mechanical properties
    Phase transformations (Statistical physics)
    
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    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/11124/12280
    Abstract
    Dual-phase steels have seen increased use in automotive applications in recent years, in order to meet the goals of weight reduction and occupant safety. Variations in nitrogen content that may be encountered in steel sourced from a basic oxygen furnace process compared to an electric arc furnace process require that dual-phase steel producers understand the ways that nitrogen affects processing and properties. In the current work, the distribution of nitrogen was investigated in a dual-phase steel with a base chemistry of 0.1 C, 2.0 Mn, 0.2 Cr, 0.2 Mo (wt pct) across a range of nitrogen contents (30-159 ppm) with Al (0.2 and 0.08 wt pct), and Ti (0.02 wt pct) additions used for precipitation control of nitrogen amounts. The distribution of nitrogen amongst trapping sites, including precipitates, grain boundaries, dislocations, and interstitial sites (away from other types of defects) was determined from a combination of electrolytic dissolution, internal friction, and three-dimensional atom probe tomography experiments. Various mechanisms by which different amounts and locations of nitrogen affect phase transformations and mechanical properties were identified from quantitative metallography, dilatometric measurement of phase transformations, tensile testing, and nanoindentation hardness testing. Results indicate nitrogen that is not precipitated with Ti or Al (free nitrogen) partitions to austenite (and thus martensite) during typical intercritical annealing treatments, and is mostly contained in Cottrell atmospheres in martensite. Due to the austenite stabilizing effect of nitrogen, the presence of free nitrogen during intercritical annealing leads to a higher austenite fraction in certain conditions. Thus, the presence of free nitrogen in a dual-phase microstructure will lead to an increase in tensile and yield strengths from both an increase in martensite fraction, and an increase in martensite hardness due to solid solution strengthening. Despite the presence of free nitrogen, no yield point elongation was detected in tensile stress-strain results, including after 80 °C aging treatments. This was likely due to the partitioning of nitrogen, such that the ferritic regions of the microstructure contained less nitrogen than is required to saturate the high dislocation density in ferrite. Measured tensile and yield strength sensitivities to free nitrogen content range between 7 and 13 GPa/wt pct N.
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