2022
DOI: 10.1002/srin.202200686
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Novel Martensitic High Carbon–Nitrogen Steel Produced by Casting at Low Pressure

Abstract: Nitrogen‐containing steels have become an attractive material in industrial fields due to their excellent mechanical properties. Nevertheless, the current manufacturing methods to produce nitrogen steels are linked to technologies with high working pressures. Alloying elements such as Cr, Mn, and Mo enhance the solubility of nitrogen in the melt, which allows the production at atmospheric pressure. Herein, carbon–nitrogen martensitic steels are produced at low pressure (7 × 105 Pa). The composition is designed… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(4 citation statements)
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“…The database used for this design was TCFE9. The alloys were produced in an induction furnace with a controlled nitrogen atmosphere, to get equilibrium and avoid possible desorption of nitrogen to the environment upon melting and solidification, and thus avoid heterogeneous zones or the production of bubbles in the steel [1]. Si3N4 powder (Alfa Aesar, 85-95% purity) was used as a nitrogen source, and the pressure used in the process was the Tunja atmospheric pressure, one of the highest cities in Colombia, 2,822 m (~7x10 4 Pa, 0.69 atm).…”
Section: Steel Design and Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The database used for this design was TCFE9. The alloys were produced in an induction furnace with a controlled nitrogen atmosphere, to get equilibrium and avoid possible desorption of nitrogen to the environment upon melting and solidification, and thus avoid heterogeneous zones or the production of bubbles in the steel [1]. Si3N4 powder (Alfa Aesar, 85-95% purity) was used as a nitrogen source, and the pressure used in the process was the Tunja atmospheric pressure, one of the highest cities in Colombia, 2,822 m (~7x10 4 Pa, 0.69 atm).…”
Section: Steel Design and Productionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These carbides rich in niobium are seen in Figure 4(d) and should have a stoichiometry of (Nb,Mo)C or (Nb,Mo)(C,N)0,5 [23]. According to the thermodynamic calculations in Figure 2, these carbides are formed at temperatures around 1300 °C and are expected to be M(C,N) [1]. The presence of precipitates found in the steel can improve mechanical properties such as wear resistance or hardness, however, this can lead to an impoverishment of other properties, such as corrosion resistance [15].…”
Section: Microstructurementioning
confidence: 99%
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