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High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations

Modern means of transport will play a significant role in the smart city. In the automotive industry, high-strength steels such as Docol are employed more often. This kind of material is relatively not very well weldable. The main reason is related to the Heat Affect Zone, the region in which cracks...

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Autores principales: Szczucka-Lasota, Bożena, Węgrzyn, Tomasz, Szymczak, Tadeusz, Jurek, Adam
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7920426/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33669449
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14040936
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author Szczucka-Lasota, Bożena
Węgrzyn, Tomasz
Szymczak, Tadeusz
Jurek, Adam
author_facet Szczucka-Lasota, Bożena
Węgrzyn, Tomasz
Szymczak, Tadeusz
Jurek, Adam
author_sort Szczucka-Lasota, Bożena
collection PubMed
description Modern means of transport will play a significant role in the smart city. In the automotive industry, high-strength steels such as Docol are employed more often. This kind of material is relatively not very well weldable. The main reason is related to the Heat Affect Zone, the region in which cracks occur. Another disadvantage is connected with differences in values of ultimate strength of parent and weld material. The differences can be diminished using the correct welding process, which employs nickel and molybdenum electrode wires at much lower sulfur content. The weld metal deposit contains mainly martensite and bainite with coarse ferrite, while the parent material contains mainly martensite and rather fine ferrite. New technology, micro-jet cooling after the joining process enables to obtain the microstructure of weld metal deposit at acceptable parameters. Welding with micro-jet cooling could be treated as a very promising welding Docol steels process with high industrial application. Results of non-destructive inspections on macro samples corresponded with further destructive test results (tensile strength, hardness, fatigue, metallographic structure analyses). This article aims to verify fatigue behavior of Docol 1200 M steel after welding supported by the cooling using the micro-jet technique. For the first time, micro-jet cooling was used to weld this kind of steel to check the mechanical properties of the joint, especially to determine the fatigue limit. This study is formulated as follows: investigating fatigue resistance of the Docol 1200 M weld manufactured at the cooling process with micro-jets. The joints were produced in the MAG (Metal Active Gas) technology modified by micro-jet cooling. The results collected in the fatigue test were processed in the form of the Wöhler’s S–N diagram following the fatigue limit of the weld examined. All data have indicated the possibility of obtaining a new method of welded joints with high fatigue limit minimum of 480 MPa. It could be important to achieve a tensile strength of 700 MPa while maintaining the best relative elongation at the level of the base material.
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spelling pubmed-79204262021-03-02 High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations Szczucka-Lasota, Bożena Węgrzyn, Tomasz Szymczak, Tadeusz Jurek, Adam Materials (Basel) Article Modern means of transport will play a significant role in the smart city. In the automotive industry, high-strength steels such as Docol are employed more often. This kind of material is relatively not very well weldable. The main reason is related to the Heat Affect Zone, the region in which cracks occur. Another disadvantage is connected with differences in values of ultimate strength of parent and weld material. The differences can be diminished using the correct welding process, which employs nickel and molybdenum electrode wires at much lower sulfur content. The weld metal deposit contains mainly martensite and bainite with coarse ferrite, while the parent material contains mainly martensite and rather fine ferrite. New technology, micro-jet cooling after the joining process enables to obtain the microstructure of weld metal deposit at acceptable parameters. Welding with micro-jet cooling could be treated as a very promising welding Docol steels process with high industrial application. Results of non-destructive inspections on macro samples corresponded with further destructive test results (tensile strength, hardness, fatigue, metallographic structure analyses). This article aims to verify fatigue behavior of Docol 1200 M steel after welding supported by the cooling using the micro-jet technique. For the first time, micro-jet cooling was used to weld this kind of steel to check the mechanical properties of the joint, especially to determine the fatigue limit. This study is formulated as follows: investigating fatigue resistance of the Docol 1200 M weld manufactured at the cooling process with micro-jets. The joints were produced in the MAG (Metal Active Gas) technology modified by micro-jet cooling. The results collected in the fatigue test were processed in the form of the Wöhler’s S–N diagram following the fatigue limit of the weld examined. All data have indicated the possibility of obtaining a new method of welded joints with high fatigue limit minimum of 480 MPa. It could be important to achieve a tensile strength of 700 MPa while maintaining the best relative elongation at the level of the base material. MDPI 2021-02-16 /pmc/articles/PMC7920426/ /pubmed/33669449 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14040936 Text en © 2021 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Szczucka-Lasota, Bożena
Węgrzyn, Tomasz
Szymczak, Tadeusz
Jurek, Adam
High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations
title High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations
title_full High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations
title_fullStr High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations
title_full_unstemmed High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations
title_short High Martensitic Steel after Welding with Micro-Jet Cooling in Microstructural and Mechanical Investigations
title_sort high martensitic steel after welding with micro-jet cooling in microstructural and mechanical investigations
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7920426/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33669449
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma14040936
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