2023
DOI: 10.1002/mawe.202200184
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On ascertaining hardness‐microstructure relationship in annealed steel for varying carbon content

Abstract: Plain carbon steels of five different carbon contents up to eutectoid composition have been provided with the conventional full annealing treatment. Qualitative and quantitative studies of the microstructure are carried out using optical microscopy and field emission scanning electron microscopy techniques. Even under similar cooling rate pertaining to the full annealing treatment (furnace cooling); microstructural modifications of individual microconstituents are feasible with varying chemistry (carbon conten… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(4 citation statements)
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“…It is interesting to note that the slope of Hall–Petch type relationship ( K PF ) in the present investigation (involving non‐equilibrium still air cooling pertaining to normalizing treatment) for hardness variation in proeutectoid α‐ferrite region is 392 HV μm −1/2 (as per equation (10)). This value is much higher than the K PF value (238 HV μm −1/2 ) obtained for the annealing treatment involving slow furnace cooling in the earlier investigation by the research group of present corresponding author [10]. Such an augmented hardening effect of the proeutectoid α‐ferrite region in the present work can be eventually correlated to the evolution of more proportion of subgrains within proeutectoid α‐ferrite region under transformation stress exerted during evolution of greater proportion of pearlite region all around for higher gross carbon content under faster rate of cooling (air cooling) of steel as already exemplified with electron back scattered diffraction study, Figure 7.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 63%
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“…It is interesting to note that the slope of Hall–Petch type relationship ( K PF ) in the present investigation (involving non‐equilibrium still air cooling pertaining to normalizing treatment) for hardness variation in proeutectoid α‐ferrite region is 392 HV μm −1/2 (as per equation (10)). This value is much higher than the K PF value (238 HV μm −1/2 ) obtained for the annealing treatment involving slow furnace cooling in the earlier investigation by the research group of present corresponding author [10]. Such an augmented hardening effect of the proeutectoid α‐ferrite region in the present work can be eventually correlated to the evolution of more proportion of subgrains within proeutectoid α‐ferrite region under transformation stress exerted during evolution of greater proportion of pearlite region all around for higher gross carbon content under faster rate of cooling (air cooling) of steel as already exemplified with electron back scattered diffraction study, Figure 7.…”
Section: Resultscontrasting
confidence: 63%
“…The plain carbon steels of hypoeutectoid category (containing 0.05 weight %, 0.192 weight %, 0.35 weight % and 0.48 weight % carbon) and eutectoid category (containing 0.79 weight % carbon) with a detailed chemical composition as enumerated in earlier work has been taken up for normalizing heat treatment process [10]. In this normalizing process, the small pieces of specimens were austenitized at 917 °C, 874 °C, 850 °C, 828 °C, 769 °C for steels containing 0.05 weight %, 0.192 weight %, 0.35 weight %, 0.48 weight % and 0.79 weight % carbon, respectively (corresponding to the fully austenitic domain) for a duration of 1 hour followed by cooling in still air to the room temperature.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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