Atomic mechanism of acicular ferrite transformation in steels  @bhadeshia123
Atomic mechanism of acicular ferrite transformation in steels  @bhadeshia123
bhadeshia123 | Atomic mechanism of acicular ferrite transformation in steels @bhadeshia123 | Uploaded September 2022 | Updated October 2024, 7 hours ago.
Non-metallic inclusions are anathema when it comes to the design of strong steels because they become the initiation sites for fracture. Huge efforts have been made devoted to making clean steels - the oxygen concentration of a hard bearing steel is routinely less than 10 ppm. However, there are other structural steels that have to be welded where the localised heat input generates microstructures in the heat-affected zone that are undesirable. The alloys that are used to deposit the weld must have good properties in the as-cast state. In both of these circumstances, specific non-metallic inclusions are a positive boon in that they provide substrates for the intragranular nucleation of bainite. As a consequence, highly organised sheaves of bainite are altered into a more chaotic arrangement that frequently deflects propagating cracks and hence enhances the toughness. This is the so-called acicular ferrite that is the subject of this lecture.
Atomic mechanism of acicular ferrite transformation in steelsSome steels research at the Universidad Federal Fluminense, BrazilSteel research in the steel cityHigh-entropy alloys - Part 3Crystallography, martensitic transformation. Lecture 9 of 9Theory of transformations in steelMulti-metal additive manufacturing: in-situ alloying, composition control and species mixingTransformations during welding of HSLA steelsChemical potential - a simple explanationSteels: pearlite. Lecture 8 of 12Steels: design of bainitic steels. Lecture 4 of 12Characterisation of steels using modern electron microscopy techniques, by Dr  Geoff West

Atomic mechanism of acicular ferrite transformation in steels @bhadeshia123

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