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Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill

It is not realistic to optimize the roll pass design of profile rolling mills, which typically roll hundreds of profiles, using physical modelling or operational rolling. The use of reliable models of microstructure evolution is preferable here. Based on the mathematical equations describing the mic...

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Autores principales: Sauer, Michal, Fabík, Richard, Schindler, Ivo, Kawulok, Petr, Opěla, Petr, Kawulok, Rostislav, Vodárek, Vlastimil, Rusz, Stanislav
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9822226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36614627
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16010288
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author Sauer, Michal
Fabík, Richard
Schindler, Ivo
Kawulok, Petr
Opěla, Petr
Kawulok, Rostislav
Vodárek, Vlastimil
Rusz, Stanislav
author_facet Sauer, Michal
Fabík, Richard
Schindler, Ivo
Kawulok, Petr
Opěla, Petr
Kawulok, Rostislav
Vodárek, Vlastimil
Rusz, Stanislav
author_sort Sauer, Michal
collection PubMed
description It is not realistic to optimize the roll pass design of profile rolling mills, which typically roll hundreds of profiles, using physical modelling or operational rolling. The use of reliable models of microstructure evolution is preferable here. Based on the mathematical equations describing the microstructure evolution during hot rolling, a modified microstructure evolution model was presented that better accounts for the influence of strain-induced precipitation (SIP) on the kinetics of static recrystallization. The time required for half of the structure to soften, t(0.5), by static recrystallization was calculated separately for both situations in which strain-induced precipitation occurred or did not occur. On this basis, the resulting model was more sensitive to the description of grain coarsening in the high-rolling-temperature region, which is a consequence of the rapid progress of static recrystallization and the larger interpass times during rolling on cross-country and continuous mills. The modified model was verified using a plain strain compression test (PSCT) simulation of rolling a 100-mm-diameter round bar performed on the Hydrawedge II hot deformation simulator (HDS-20). Four variants of simulations were performed, differing in the rolling temperature in the last four passes. For comparison with the outputs of the modified model, an analysis of the austenite grain size after rolling was performed using optical metallography. For indirect comparison with the model outputs, the SIP initiation time was determined based on the NbX precipitate size distribution obtained by TEM. Using the PSCT and the outputs from the modified microstructure evolution model, it was found that during conventional rolling, strain-induced precipitation occurs after the last pass and thus does not affect the austenite grain size. By lowering the rolling temperature, it was possible to reduce the grain size by up to 56 μm, while increasing the mean flow stress by a maximum of 74%. The resulting grain size for all four modes was consistent with the operating results.
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spelling pubmed-98222262023-01-07 Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill Sauer, Michal Fabík, Richard Schindler, Ivo Kawulok, Petr Opěla, Petr Kawulok, Rostislav Vodárek, Vlastimil Rusz, Stanislav Materials (Basel) Article It is not realistic to optimize the roll pass design of profile rolling mills, which typically roll hundreds of profiles, using physical modelling or operational rolling. The use of reliable models of microstructure evolution is preferable here. Based on the mathematical equations describing the microstructure evolution during hot rolling, a modified microstructure evolution model was presented that better accounts for the influence of strain-induced precipitation (SIP) on the kinetics of static recrystallization. The time required for half of the structure to soften, t(0.5), by static recrystallization was calculated separately for both situations in which strain-induced precipitation occurred or did not occur. On this basis, the resulting model was more sensitive to the description of grain coarsening in the high-rolling-temperature region, which is a consequence of the rapid progress of static recrystallization and the larger interpass times during rolling on cross-country and continuous mills. The modified model was verified using a plain strain compression test (PSCT) simulation of rolling a 100-mm-diameter round bar performed on the Hydrawedge II hot deformation simulator (HDS-20). Four variants of simulations were performed, differing in the rolling temperature in the last four passes. For comparison with the outputs of the modified model, an analysis of the austenite grain size after rolling was performed using optical metallography. For indirect comparison with the model outputs, the SIP initiation time was determined based on the NbX precipitate size distribution obtained by TEM. Using the PSCT and the outputs from the modified microstructure evolution model, it was found that during conventional rolling, strain-induced precipitation occurs after the last pass and thus does not affect the austenite grain size. By lowering the rolling temperature, it was possible to reduce the grain size by up to 56 μm, while increasing the mean flow stress by a maximum of 74%. The resulting grain size for all four modes was consistent with the operating results. MDPI 2022-12-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9822226/ /pubmed/36614627 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16010288 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/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 (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Sauer, Michal
Fabík, Richard
Schindler, Ivo
Kawulok, Petr
Opěla, Petr
Kawulok, Rostislav
Vodárek, Vlastimil
Rusz, Stanislav
Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill
title Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill
title_full Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill
title_fullStr Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill
title_full_unstemmed Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill
title_short Analysis of the Microstructure Development of Nb-Microalloyed Steel during Rolling on a Heavy-Section Mill
title_sort analysis of the microstructure development of nb-microalloyed steel during rolling on a heavy-section mill
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9822226/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36614627
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma16010288
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