Achieving ultra-high strength, good toughness and cost reduction in secondary hardening steel via dual precipitation

Haofei Zhu, Zhiping Xiong*, Jianwen Mao, Xingwang Cheng

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The dual precipitation of NiAl particles and M2C carbides during ageing plays a critical role in achieving an optimal balance of strength and toughness in low-cobalt secondary hardening steel, yet this remains scarcely investigated. This work investigates the evolution of NiAl and M2C during ageing at 482 °C for durations ranging from 1 h to 150 h, focusing on their influence on the strength and impact toughness of martensitic steel. It was found that after 5 h of ageing, NiAl particles nucleate rapidly with high number density and nearly reaches saturation, suppressing dislocation recovery. This leads to a high yield strength of 1875 MPa. When the ageing time is extended to 32 h, the NiAl particles coarsen and the volume fraction of M2C carbides increases, while the dislocation recovery remains minimal. Consequently, the yield strength increases slightly to 1895 MPa. Notably, the impact toughness improves from 17 J at 5 h to 28 J at 32 h, reflecting to a 65 % improvement. This is predominantly due to the reduction in the number density of brittle NiAl particles which can induce cracks and due to the formation of film-like reversed austenite which can deflect cracks. After 32 h of ageing, the yield strength and impact toughness of the secondary hardening steel are comparable to those of commercial AerMet310 steel. Notably, the cobalt content is reduced from 15.0 wt% to 5.0 wt%, resulting in an approximate 36 % reduction in raw material costs.

Original languageEnglish
Article number114869
JournalMaterials Characterization
Volume223
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - May 2025

Keywords

  • Ageing
  • Dual precipitation
  • Low-cost
  • Martensitic steel
  • Toughness

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Achieving ultra-high strength, good toughness and cost reduction in secondary hardening steel via dual precipitation'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this