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Rapid solidification microstructure and carbide precipitation behavior in electron beam melted high-speed steel

Rapid solidification microstructure and carbide precipitation behavior in electron beam melted high-speed steel
Rapid solidification microstructure and carbide precipitation behavior in electron beam melted high-speed steel
The solidified microstructure and carbide precipitation behavior in an S390 high-speed steel processed by electron beam melting (EBM) have been fully characterized. The as-EBM microstructure consists of discontinuous network of very fine primary carbides dispersed in auto-tempered martensite matrix together with a limited amount of retained austenite. The carbide network consists of M2C/M6C and MC carbides. Both the columnar and near-equiaxed grain structures were found in as-EBM microstructure and the presence of inter-dendritic eutectic carbides assisted in revealing the dendritic solidification nature. The top-layer microstructure observation confirmed that the columnar dendritic structured grains were located adjacent to the micro-melt pool boundary, indicating an epitaxial growth with the average growth direction parallel to the maximum thermal gradient. At the center of the micro-melt pool, the near-equiaxed grains were developed by dendritic growth parallel to the beam traveling direction. The carbide decomposition was revealed by scanning transmission electron microscopy and confirmed by transmission Kikuchi diffraction. The MC carbides (rich in V followed by W) nucleated at the interface between M2C (W, Fe, Mo, and Co in the order of significance) and the matrix and then grew from the outside inward, but their nucleation might occur from the M2C carbide itself. The thermal effect induced by the adjacent scan lines seems to trigger a solid-state phase transformation of MC → M2C + γ-Fe. The elemental migration was theoretically calculated and compared with the experimental results. The high hardness of ~ 65 HRC and good transverse rupture strength of ~ 2500 MPa in as-EBM S390 means that EBM processing can be used to fabricate highly alloyed tool steels. With the help of the post-processing heat treatment, the best Rockwell hardness of 73.1±0.2 HRC and transverse rupture strength of 3012±34 MPa can be obtained.
1073-5623
2411–2429
Jin, J.
9ca5def7-4893-4d26-abc9-85a7ff44412f
Gao, R.
3d05b27c-b264-4979-b41d-9fc4b34e353f
Peng, H.
1420ec62-a5fe-4d22-b628-d10b43cf13a1
Guo, H.
c90b077d-dc5c-44a2-ab90-34b040785966
Gong, S.
8324c4cb-a340-4877-a82a-2a1ab6a86db0
Chen, B.
be54a9a8-da2a-4e6f-ae0e-0b076be87daf
Jin, J.
9ca5def7-4893-4d26-abc9-85a7ff44412f
Gao, R.
3d05b27c-b264-4979-b41d-9fc4b34e353f
Peng, H.
1420ec62-a5fe-4d22-b628-d10b43cf13a1
Guo, H.
c90b077d-dc5c-44a2-ab90-34b040785966
Gong, S.
8324c4cb-a340-4877-a82a-2a1ab6a86db0
Chen, B.
be54a9a8-da2a-4e6f-ae0e-0b076be87daf

Jin, J., Gao, R., Peng, H., Guo, H., Gong, S. and Chen, B. (2020) Rapid solidification microstructure and carbide precipitation behavior in electron beam melted high-speed steel. Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A, 51, 2411–2429. (doi:10.1007/s11661-020-05661-z).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The solidified microstructure and carbide precipitation behavior in an S390 high-speed steel processed by electron beam melting (EBM) have been fully characterized. The as-EBM microstructure consists of discontinuous network of very fine primary carbides dispersed in auto-tempered martensite matrix together with a limited amount of retained austenite. The carbide network consists of M2C/M6C and MC carbides. Both the columnar and near-equiaxed grain structures were found in as-EBM microstructure and the presence of inter-dendritic eutectic carbides assisted in revealing the dendritic solidification nature. The top-layer microstructure observation confirmed that the columnar dendritic structured grains were located adjacent to the micro-melt pool boundary, indicating an epitaxial growth with the average growth direction parallel to the maximum thermal gradient. At the center of the micro-melt pool, the near-equiaxed grains were developed by dendritic growth parallel to the beam traveling direction. The carbide decomposition was revealed by scanning transmission electron microscopy and confirmed by transmission Kikuchi diffraction. The MC carbides (rich in V followed by W) nucleated at the interface between M2C (W, Fe, Mo, and Co in the order of significance) and the matrix and then grew from the outside inward, but their nucleation might occur from the M2C carbide itself. The thermal effect induced by the adjacent scan lines seems to trigger a solid-state phase transformation of MC → M2C + γ-Fe. The elemental migration was theoretically calculated and compared with the experimental results. The high hardness of ~ 65 HRC and good transverse rupture strength of ~ 2500 MPa in as-EBM S390 means that EBM processing can be used to fabricate highly alloyed tool steels. With the help of the post-processing heat treatment, the best Rockwell hardness of 73.1±0.2 HRC and transverse rupture strength of 3012±34 MPa can be obtained.

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Published date: 11 February 2020

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 489931
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/489931
ISSN: 1073-5623
PURE UUID: 7633c9d1-151b-4077-86fb-3a9b014dd724
ORCID for B. Chen: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1960-080X

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Date deposited: 07 May 2024 16:57
Last modified: 08 May 2024 02:08

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Contributors

Author: J. Jin
Author: R. Gao
Author: H. Peng
Author: H. Guo
Author: S. Gong
Author: B. Chen ORCID iD

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