Effect of combined tempering and aging in the austenite reversion, precipitation, and tensile properties of an additively manufactured maraging 300 steel

Maraging 300 is an ultrahigh strength steel with significant alloy addition, resulting in a martensitic matrix hardened by precipitation through aging treatment. In these steels, intercritical tempering can provide reverted austenite and precipitation of intermetallic products, increasing the ductil...

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Autores:
Conde, Fábio Faria
Escobar, Julián David
Rodríguez, Johnnatan
Oliveira, Marcelo Falcão
Ávila, Julián Arnaldo
Conrado Ramos Moreira, Afonso
Tipo de recurso:
Article of journal
Fecha de publicación:
2021
Institución:
Universidad Autónoma de Occidente
Repositorio:
RED: Repositorio Educativo Digital UAO
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:red.uao.edu.co:10614/13926
Acceso en línea:
https://hdl.handle.net/10614/13926
https://red.uao.edu.co/
Palabra clave:
Materiales - Propiedades mecánicas
Material - Mechanical properties
Austenite reversion
Maraging 300
Additive manufacturing
Laser powder-bed fusion
Mechanical properties
x-ray measurements
Rights
openAccess
License
Derechos reservados -Springer Nature, 2021
Description
Summary:Maraging 300 is an ultrahigh strength steel with significant alloy addition, resulting in a martensitic matrix hardened by precipitation through aging treatment. In these steels, intercritical tempering can provide reverted austenite and precipitation of intermetallic products, increasing the ductility of additively manufactured parts due to austenite presence. Studies deal with postprocessing of additive manufactured parts of maraging steel; however, few focused on phases evolution during the heat treatments and their mechanical response. In the present work, a maraging 300 steel processed by laser-based powder-bed fusion was studied with a focus on microstructural and mechanical properties after applying several postprocessing heat treatments. Tensile tests assessed the mechanical properties, and the microstructure was analyzed by scanning and transmission electron microscopy. A synchrotron beamline with x-ray diffraction was used to conduct in situ measurements of martensite and austenite evolution. The in situ phase evolution revealed that isothermal heat treatments were efficient in promoting martensite-to-austenite reversion. Likewise, the presence of austenite significantly enhanced the ductility, however, at some mechanical strength expense