TY - JOUR
T1 - Thermo-Kinetic Understanding of the Correlation Between Austenite Reverse Transformation and Mechanical Properties for Medium Manganese Steel
AU - Hou, Yong
AU - Liu, Haiyu
AU - Wang, Yao
AU - Zhang, Yu
AU - Zhang, Yayun
AU - Liu, Feng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Chinese Society for Metals (CSM) and Springer-Verlag GmbH Germany, part of Springer Nature 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - How to describe the austenite reverse transformation (ART) has always been considered as a key problem of controlling microstructures and mechanical properties in high-strength steels. So far, numerous studies have been conducted, unfortunately, without fully considering diffusion of elements, interface migration, and interaction between trans-interface diffusion and interface migration, as well as synergy of thermodynamic and kinetic for interfacial migration. A more flexible modeling for the ART is herein developed using thermodynamic extremal principle, where the concept of trans-interface diffusion in two steps, i.e., from the parent phase to the interface and from the interface to the product phase, as well as the Gibbs energy balance approach, was introduced to predict the behavior of interface migration and element trans-interface diffusion within the migrating interface. Subsequently, the thermodynamic driving force ΔG and the effective kinetic energy barrier Qeff for the ART were also analytically performed, as well as a unified expression for so-called generalized stability (GS). It is demonstrated that the higher driving force in the ART generally results in the increased yield strength, while the larger GS tends to yield improved uniform elongation, thus forming a correspondence between the thermo-kinetics trade-off and the strength-ductility trade-off. Applying a proposed criterion of high ΔG-high GS, the present model can be adopted to design the ART, which will produce the austenite microstructure with high strength and high plasticity, as evidenced by the current experiments.
AB - How to describe the austenite reverse transformation (ART) has always been considered as a key problem of controlling microstructures and mechanical properties in high-strength steels. So far, numerous studies have been conducted, unfortunately, without fully considering diffusion of elements, interface migration, and interaction between trans-interface diffusion and interface migration, as well as synergy of thermodynamic and kinetic for interfacial migration. A more flexible modeling for the ART is herein developed using thermodynamic extremal principle, where the concept of trans-interface diffusion in two steps, i.e., from the parent phase to the interface and from the interface to the product phase, as well as the Gibbs energy balance approach, was introduced to predict the behavior of interface migration and element trans-interface diffusion within the migrating interface. Subsequently, the thermodynamic driving force ΔG and the effective kinetic energy barrier Qeff for the ART were also analytically performed, as well as a unified expression for so-called generalized stability (GS). It is demonstrated that the higher driving force in the ART generally results in the increased yield strength, while the larger GS tends to yield improved uniform elongation, thus forming a correspondence between the thermo-kinetics trade-off and the strength-ductility trade-off. Applying a proposed criterion of high ΔG-high GS, the present model can be adopted to design the ART, which will produce the austenite microstructure with high strength and high plasticity, as evidenced by the current experiments.
KW - Austenite reverse transformation
KW - Generalized stability
KW - Material property
KW - Thermo-kinetic correlation
KW - Thermodynamic extremal principle
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105001936410&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s40195-025-01849-7
DO - 10.1007/s40195-025-01849-7
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105001936410
SN - 1006-7191
JO - Acta Metallurgica Sinica (English Letters)
JF - Acta Metallurgica Sinica (English Letters)
M1 - 115311
ER -