Effect of Chemical Composition and Structure on Mechanical Properties of High-Strength Welding Steels

被引:0
|
作者
V. M. Goritskii
G. R. Shneiderov
I. A. Guseva
机构
[1] CJSC “Melnikov Central Research and Design Institute of Steel Structures”,
来源
Metallurgist | 2019年 / 63卷
关键词
thermomechanical rolling; high-strength steel; mechanical properties; impact toughness; impact toughness anisotropy factor; steel structure;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
Based on the analysis of the Russian-made 4 to 16 mm thick rolled products produced by thermomechanical rolling from high-strength (yield point: 433 to 828 MPa) low-alloyed welding steels obtained as a result of 15 melting runs, the effect of chemical composition and structure on the mechanical properties, such as yield point, impact toughness, and impact toughness anisotropy factor, was studied. It was shown that the yield point of manganese steel (1.62–1.80 wt. % Mn) is mainly caused by microalloying with titanium, and to a lesser degree – with niobium and vanadium. An increase in the yield point of steel in excess of 700 MPa increases its tendency to impact toughness anisotropy. Within the concentration range from 0.001 to 0.08 wt. % Ti, the value of anisotropy factor Ka , which varies from 1.45 to 1.80, does not depend on Ti content, but increases sharply to Ka = 3.19 once the Ti content increases (in excess of 0.08 wt. %). A considerable negative effect of Nb content in steel on impact toughness (KCV– 40), measured on transverse specimens, has been established. A joint negative effect of Ti + Al on KCV– 40 is somewhat less pronounced. The presence of Al in the inclusions of complex composition (Ti-Al-Cr) noticeably reduces (by 4.5 times) the negative effect of Ti on KCV– 40 of highstrength manganese steel.
引用
收藏
页码:21 / 32
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Effect of radiation on the properties of high-strength martensitic steels
    Shamardin, VK
    Pecherin, AM
    METAL SCIENCE AND HEAT TREATMENT, 1999, 41 (1-2) : 28 - 31
  • [32] The effect of radiation on the properties of high-strength martensitic steels
    Shamardin, V.K.
    Pecherin, A.M.
    Jisuanji Yanjiu yu Fazhan/Computer Research and Development, 1998, 35 (11): : 25 - 28
  • [33] THE EFFECT OF DRAFTING PRACTICE ON THE PROPERTIES OF HIGH-STRENGTH STEELS
    SOUTHWICK, PD
    JOURNAL OF METALS, 1983, 35 (12): : 78 - 79
  • [34] Effect of the structure on the mechanical properties and cracking resistance of welded joints of low-alloyed high-strength steels
    Berdnikova, Olena
    Pozniakov, Valery
    Bernatskyi, Artemii
    Alekseienko, Tetiana
    Sydorets, Volodymyr
    6TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE FRACTURE MECHANICS OF MATERIALS AND STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY (FMSI 2019), 2019, 16 : 89 - 96
  • [35] EFFECT OF ALLOYING ELEMENTS ON MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES OF HIGH-STRENGTH AND HIGH TOUGHNESS FERRITIC STEELS
    ASAKURA, K
    TETSU TO HAGANE-JOURNAL OF THE IRON AND STEEL INSTITUTE OF JAPAN, 1985, 71 : 1341 - 1341
  • [36] Influence of chemical composition on uniform corrosion rate of high-strength low alloy and extra high-strength steels
    Szymlek, Krzysztof
    Skalski, Igor
    OCHRONA PRZED KOROZJA, 2009, 52 (09): : 355 - 358
  • [37] EFFECT OF THE CHEMICAL AND PHASE-COMPOSITION OF HIGH-STRENGTH FILLER METAL ON THE WELDABILITY OF DISSIMILAR STEELS
    LAZKO, VE
    BORISOV, MT
    FEDOROV, VG
    WELDING PRODUCTION, 1982, 29 (10): : 24 - 28
  • [38] Thermal Effect of Welding on Mechanical Behavior of High-Strength Steel
    Jiang, Jin
    Peng, Z. Y.
    Ye, M.
    Wang, Y. B.
    Wang, X.
    Bao, W.
    JOURNAL OF MATERIALS IN CIVIL ENGINEERING, 2021, 33 (08)
  • [39] Hot Ductility, Homogeneity of the Composition, Structure, and Properties of High-Strength Microalloyed Steels: A Critical Review
    Zaitsev, Alexander
    Arutyunyan, Nataliya
    Koldaev, Anton
    METALS, 2023, 13 (06)