The potential of spinodal ferrite decomposition for increasing the very high cycle fatigue strength of duplex stainless steel
Journal article, 2016

Duplex stainless steels (DSS) have become candidate materials for structural applications, where conventional austenitic stainless steels fail due to very high cycle fatigue (VHCF) in combination with corrosive attack. It seems that DSS exhibit a fatigue limit, which can be attributed to the two-phase austenitic-ferritic microstructure. Ultrasonic VHCF testing revealed that the phase boundaries are efficient obstacles for the transmission of slip bands and microstructural fatigue cracks up to 10(9) cycles and even beyond. The barrier strength is determined by the misorientation relationship between neighbouring grains but also by the strength of the individual phases. By thermal treatment at 475 degrees C, spinodal decomposition of the ferrite phase results in the formation of Cr-rich alpha' precipitates. While during static loading these precipitates give rise to a loss in ductility (475 degrees C embrittlement), it was shown that the HCF strength can be increased and that there is also a tendency towards a beneficial effect on the VHCF behaviour. A more detailed analysis of the local plasticity sites by means of atom probe tomography (APT) revealed a dissolution of the a' precipitates within operated slip bands. The dissolution might be an indication for a local softening mechanism that limits the VHCF strengthening effect of spinodal decomposition.

Duplex stainless steel

Spinodal decomposition

Very high cycle fatigue

Atom probe tomography

Author

Ulrich Krupp

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Microstructure

M. Soker

Osnabrück University of Applied Sciences

A. Giertler

Osnabrück University of Applied Sciences

B. Donges

University of Siegen

H. J. Christ

University of Siegen

K. Wackermann

Fraunhofer-Institut fur Werkstoffmechanik

Torben Boll

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Microstructure

Mattias Thuvander

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Microstructure

M. C. Marinelli

Universidad Nacional de Rosario

International Journal of Fatigue

0142-1123 (ISSN)

Vol. 93 363-371

Subject Categories

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

Areas of Advance

Materials Science

DOI

10.1016/j.ijfatigue.2016.05.012

More information

Latest update

10/31/2018