Author:
Sahu P.,Hamada A. S.,Ghosh Chowdhury S.,Karjalainen L. P.
Abstract
Structure and microstructure evolution under various cooling rates of a wrought austenitic steel, Fe–26Mn–0.14C (composition in mass %), were studied by the Rietveld method of X-ray diffraction pattern fitting, grain boundary characterization by electron back-scattered diffraction (EBSD) and optical microscopy. Cooling rate, density of stacking faults, and austenite grain size and grain boundaries influence the observed γfcc→ ∊hcptransformation and lead to significant anisotropic X-ray line broadening. Depending on the cooling conditions, the grain boundaries are misoriented at both lower and higher angles. In the ∊-martensites, the dominant planar fault is twins (∼10−3). The austenite grains were found to contain low to moderate density of stacking faults (∼10−4–10−3), which act as efficient nucleation sites of the ∊-martensites. Both X-ray and EBSD analyses estimated negligible twins in the austenite. Approximate average dislocation densities have been estimated and correlated with the grain structure.
Publisher
International Union of Crystallography (IUCr)
Subject
General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology
Cited by
19 articles.
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