August 30, 2012
Journal Article

Twinning and martensite in a 304 austenitic stainless steel

Abstract

The microstructure characteristics and deformation behavior of 304L stainless steel during tensile deformation at two different strain rates have been investigated by means of interrupted tensile tests, electron-backscatter-diffraction (EBSD) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) techniques. The volume fractions of transformed martensite and deformation twins at different stages of the deformation process were measured using X-ray diffraction method and TEM observations. It is found that the volume fraction of martensite monotonically increases with increasing strain but decreases with increasing strain rate. On the other hand, the volume fraction of twins increases with increasing strain for strain level less than 57%. Beyond that, the volume fraction of twins decreases with increasing strain. Careful TEM observations show that stacking faults (SFs) and twins preferentially occur before the nucleation of martensite. Meanwhile, bothe-martensite and a'-martensite are observed in the deformation microstructures, indicating the co-existence of stress induced- transformation and strain-induced-transformation. We also discussed the effects of twinning and martensite transformation on work-hardening as well as the relationship between stacking faults, twinning and martensite transformation.

Revised: June 27, 2012 | Published: August 30, 2012

Citation

Shen Y., X. Li, X. Sun, Y.D. Wang, and L. Zuo. 2012. Twinning and martensite in a 304 austenitic stainless steel. Materials Science and Engineering. A. Structural Materials: Properties, Microstructure and Processing 552. PNNL-SA-88285. doi:10.1016/j.msea.2012.05.080