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Keywords = steel ingot water quenching

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18 pages, 5701 KiB  
Article
Effect of Nickel Content and Cooling Rate on the Microstructure of as Cast 316 Stainless Steels
by Lei Chen, Yang Wang, Yafeng Li, Zhengrui Zhang, Zhixuan Xue, Xinyu Ban, Chaohui Hu, Haixiao Li, Jun Tian, Wangzhong Mu, Kun Yang and Chao Chen
Crystals 2025, 15(2), 168; https://doi.org/10.3390/cryst15020168 - 10 Feb 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 1697
Abstract
To meet the requirement of low magnetic permeability, which, in turn, lowers the ferrite content of castings, of special interest is 316 stainless steel, whose low ferrite content renders it suitable also for nuclear power applications. Therefore, the effects of the composition and [...] Read more.
To meet the requirement of low magnetic permeability, which, in turn, lowers the ferrite content of castings, of special interest is 316 stainless steel, whose low ferrite content renders it suitable also for nuclear power applications. Therefore, the effects of the composition and cooling rate of 316 stainless steel castings on the ferrite content are investigated. Three 316 stainless steel continuous casting samples with different compositions (primarily differing in the Ni content) are studied, i.e., low-alloy type (L-316), medium-alloy type (M-316), and high-alloy type (H-316). The austenite-forming element nickel of three different industrial samples is 10%, 12%, and 14%, respectively. The effect of the cooling rate on the ferrite content and precipitation phases of the high Ni content of the 316 stainless steel casting (H-316) is studied by remelting experiments and different methods of quenching of liquid steel. In both cases, the ferrite content and the precipitate phases in the microstructure are analyzed using SEM and EBSD. The results indicate that compositional changes within the 316 stainless steel range lead to changes in the solidification mode. In the L-316 casting, solidified by the FA mode (ferrite–austenite mode), ferrite precipitates first from the liquid phase, followed by the formation of austenite, and the ferrite content is 11.2%. In contrast, the ferrite content in the M-316 and H-316 castings, solidified by the AF mode (austenite–ferrite mode), is 2.88% and 2.45%, respectively. The effect of the solidification mode on the ferrite content is more obvious than that of the composition. The microstructure of the L-316 casting is mainly composed of the austenitic phase and the ferritic phase. The microstructure of the M-316 casting is composed of austenite, ferrite, and a small amount of sigma phase, with a small amount of ferrite transformed into the sigma phase. The microstructure of the H-316 casting is basically composed of austenite and the sigma phase, with the ferrite has been completely transformed into sigma phase. Changes in composition have a greater influence on the precipitate phases, while the solidification mode has a lesser impact. In the remelting experiments, the ferrite content in the H-316 ingot obtained through furnace cooling and air cooling is 1.49% and 1.94%, respectively, and the cooling rates are 0.1 °C/s and 3.5 °C/s, respectively. Under oil- and water-cooling conditions, with cooling rates of 11.5 °C/s and 25.1 °C/s, respectively, the ferrite content in the ingot is controlled to below 1%. The effect of the cooling rate on the precipitation phase of the H-316L ingot is that the amount of precipitated phase in the ingot decreases with an increase in cooling rate, but, when the cooling rate exceeds a certain value (air cooling 3.5 °C/s), the change in cooling rate has little effect on the amount of the precipitated phase. Full article
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19 pages, 7756 KiB  
Article
Numerical Simulation of Water Quenching of Large Size Steel Forgings: Effects of Macrosegregation and Grain Size on Phase Distribution
by Mountadar Lyassami, Davood Shahriari, Emna Ben Fredj, Jean-Benoit Morin and Mohammad Jahazi
J. Manuf. Mater. Process. 2018, 2(2), 34; https://doi.org/10.3390/jmmp2020034 - 1 Jun 2018
Cited by 17 | Viewed by 5047
Abstract
In this paper, water quenching of large ingots was simulated using FORGE NxT 1.1® Finite Element code. Simulations were carried out for as-forged medium-carbon low-alloy steel. A novel method is proposed to simulate the different parts of a large size forged block [...] Read more.
In this paper, water quenching of large ingots was simulated using FORGE NxT 1.1® Finite Element code. Simulations were carried out for as-forged medium-carbon low-alloy steel. A novel method is proposed to simulate the different parts of a large size forged block with different chemical compositions and grain sizes using the multiple materials method. The effects of macrosegregation, grain size variation and cooling rate on phase distribution through the volume of the forged block were investigated. The delay in transformation kinetics, which is due to the effect of grain size variation and carbon content, was analyzed. Results show that macrosegregation and grain size variations significantly influence transformation start points and the volume fraction of phases that are present in each location of the forged ingot. The proposed prediction method was validated using high-resolution dilatometry experiments and X-ray diffraction measurements to evaluate accurately the volume fraction of martensite, bainite and the percentage of retained austenite for each condition. Full article
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