On the Origin of Enhanced Tempering Resistance of the Laser Additively Manufactured Hot Work Tool Steel in the As-Built Condition
Journal article, 2024

Abstract: In laser additive manufacturing (AM) of hot work tool steels, direct tempering (DT) of the tool from as-built (AB) condition without prior conventional austenitization and quenching results in enhanced tempering resistance. To date, intercellular retained austenite (RA) decomposition, leading to a shift in secondary hardening peak temperature, and finer martensite substructure are reported to be responsible for such a behavior. In this work, authors aimed at studying the strengthening contributions by performing isothermal tempering tests for long times (up to 40 hours) at elevated temperatures (up to 650 °C) on DT and quenched and tempered (QT) specimens. The thermal softening kinetics and the microstructural evolution were evaluated with the support of computational thermodynamics. The results suggest that the main contributor to enhanced temper resistance in DT condition is the larger fraction of thermally stable and extremely fine (~ 20 nm) secondary (tempering) V(C,N) compared with QT. This could be explained by the reduction of available V and C in austenitized and quenched martensite for a later secondary V(C,N) precipitation during tempering, because of equilibrium precipitation of relatively large (up to 500 nm) vanadium-rich carbonitrides during the austenitization process. A complementary effect of the substructure refinement (i.e., martensite block width) in rapidly solidified highly supersaturated martensite was also quantified in terms of Hall–Petch strengthening mechanism. The significant effect of secondary V(C,N) was successfully validated by assessing a laser AM processed vanadium-free hot work tool steel in QT and DT condition, where no significant differences in strength and temper resistance between the two conditions were evident. Graphical Abstract: (Figure presented.)

Author

Faraz Deirmina

Sandvik Machining Solutions AB

Sasan Amirabdollahian

Trentino Sviluppo S.p.A.

Greta Lindwall

Royal Institute of Technology (KTH)

Alberto Molinari

University of Trento

Jitendar Kumar Tiwari

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Eduard Hryha

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Materials and manufacture

Massimo Pellizzari

University of Trento

Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A: Physical Metallurgy and Materials Science

1073-5623 (ISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

DOI

10.1007/s11661-024-07611-5

More information

Latest update

11/6/2024