Using a dilatometer the isothermal transformation of austenite to bainite has been studied in ductile cast iron with 0.05 % Mn and a silicon content varying from 2.4 to 3.8 %. The alloys were austenitized to a carbon content in the matrix of 0.65 %. It appears that silicon retards the formation of carbides in the upper bainite region (400 °C), resulting in an amount of retained austenite up to 40 % present in the final structure at room temperature. Silicon improves the strength; in the lower bainite region the yield strength in particular. An elongation up to 10 % or more is obtained after austempering at 400 0C independent of the silicon content.
The segregation of sulfur in liquid cast iron was studied under conditions of microgravity on Spacelab 1. A rod of cast iron containing carbon, silicon, sulfur, and phosphorus was unidirectionally solidified at four different rates. The influence of sulfur on the graphite structure and the stability of an aluminum oxide skin deposited on the surface of the specimen were investigated.
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