Mechanisms for microstructural evolution of FeSiCrNi high silicon steel subjected to thermomechanical processing

Fe-6.5 wt% Si high silicon steel alloy presents excellent soft magnetic performances, but a poor plasticity limits its industrial application seriously. In this work, a novel FeSiCrNi alloy with the chemical composition of Fe-6.5Si-2Cr-12Ni (wt%) is designed and subjected to thermomechanical process...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hao Feng, Tao Wang, Jianchao Han, Shuyong Jiang, Bingyao Yan, Dong Sun, Peng Lin, Lifei Wang, Liping Bian, Junbo Yu, Yanqiu Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2024-04-01
Series:Materials & Design
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0264127524002259
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Summary:Fe-6.5 wt% Si high silicon steel alloy presents excellent soft magnetic performances, but a poor plasticity limits its industrial application seriously. In this work, a novel FeSiCrNi alloy with the chemical composition of Fe-6.5Si-2Cr-12Ni (wt%) is designed and subjected to thermomechanical processing including local canning compression at room temperature and annealing at elevated temperatures. It is observed that microstructures of FeSiCrNi specimens with a compression degree of 70 % are dominated by dislocation cells. The microstructural evolution is transformed from static recovery to static recrystallization when FeSiCrNi specimens are annealed from 400 to 700 °C. Grains with high strain energy are successively nucleated via the integration of subgrain boundaries at 600 °C and a pronounced growth of recrystallized grains occurs at 700 °C. In particular, microtextures of the FeSiCrNi alloy essentially consist of γ-fiber ({111}∥ND) and λ-fiber ({100}∥ND) textures during recovery and recrystallization. The intensity of λ-fiber texture is weakened with increasing annealing temperature, while the intensity of γ-fiber which is composed of {111} 〈112〉 and {111} 〈110〉 textures is strengthened. The intensity of {111} 〈112〉 texture within the recrystallized FeSiCrNi grains reaches the maximum value at 700 °C.
ISSN:0264-1275