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Phase Transformations & Heat Treatment

The document discusses various topics related to phase transformations in materials science, including: 1) Phase transformations can occur with or without diffusion and can be classified as isothermal or non-isothermal. 2) Isothermal transformation diagrams (TTT diagrams) show the time and temperature requirements for phase changes. 3) In Fe-C alloys, microstructure and properties depend on heating/cooling rates, with pearlite, bainite, and martensite forming under different conditions. 4) Heat treatments like annealing, normalizing, and spheroidizing are used to achieve desired microstructures in steels by controlling heating and cooling processes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
86 views39 pages

Phase Transformations & Heat Treatment

The document discusses various topics related to phase transformations in materials science, including: 1) Phase transformations can occur with or without diffusion and can be classified as isothermal or non-isothermal. 2) Isothermal transformation diagrams (TTT diagrams) show the time and temperature requirements for phase changes. 3) In Fe-C alloys, microstructure and properties depend on heating/cooling rates, with pearlite, bainite, and martensite forming under different conditions. 4) Heat treatments like annealing, normalizing, and spheroidizing are used to achieve desired microstructures in steels by controlling heating and cooling processes.

Uploaded by

Shishajimoo
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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MATERIAL SCIENCE

CHAPTER 5
PHASE TRANSFORMATION
SUBTOPICS
• Phase transformation
– with diffusion
– without diffusion
• Isothermal transformation diagram
• Transformation behaviour and
microstructure in Fe-C alloy
• Heat treatment
Phase transformation

• Phase transformation– change in


microstructure
• Phase transformation can be divided
to:
– Transformation with diffusion
– Transformation without diffusion
Transformation with
diffusion
• (i) without changes in the phase
composition or the number of phases
presence (e.g: melting, solidification
of pure metals, recrystallization)

• (ii) with changes in phase composition


and the number of phase presence
(cth: eutectic transformation)
Transformation without
diffusion
• Metastable phase will be form by
small changes in atomic arrangement
of the structure.(e.g martensitic
transformation)
• Rate of diffusion - fast
Phase transformation
• Depend on rate of cooling/heating – TIME
• Kinetics of phase transformation
• Two stages in phase transformation
process:
– Nucleation
– Growth
Kinetic of Phase
transformation
• Nucleation of new phase– involves the
appearance of very small particles or
nuclei of new phase which capable of
growing.
• Growth – Nuclei increase in size
which results the disappearance of
some of the parent phase – until the
equilibrium attained.
Kinetics of Phase
transformation
TTT DIAGRAM
Isothermal transformation diagram
TTT diagram
(Temperature, Time, % Transformation)
• Plot temperature vs the logarithm of time with
curves for beginning as well as 50% and 100%
transformation completion
• Are generated from a series of plots of
percentage transformation vs the logarithm of
time taken over a range of temperatures (S
shaped curve)
• Indicates the time necessary for transformation
begin and the time required for the
transformation completed
Phase transformation in Fe-C alloy
(refer to TTT diagram of Fe-C alloy)
• Low temperature- transformation of phase is very
slow which depend on diffusion process

• Rate of diffusion is low at lower temperature –


finer microstructure will be – Fine Pearlite

• At higher temperature, rate of diffusion is high


which permit the grain growth and the
microstructure will be coarser– Coarse Pearlite
G/RAJAH TTT
TTT diagram
• If trasformation temperature is low ( < 540C),
Bainite will be form
• At T ~ 300-400C, Upper bainite will be form –
consists of ferrite and cementite phases -
forms as needles or plates
• At T ~ 200-300C, Lower bainite will be form,
consist of ferrite plates and fine cementite
rods
TTT diagram
• If austenite – rapid cooling to room
temperature, martensite phase will be
transform – show in TTT diagram
• Martensite structure – metastable
structure ( exist in room temperature and
can transform its phase when anneal at
high temperature)
• Martensite structure not exists in phase
diagram – metastable phase
TTT diagram
Mechanical properties
• Fine pearlite is harder and higher
strength than Coarse pearlite
• Bainite is harder and higher
strength than pearlite
• Martensite is highest
strength/hardest structure but
brittle– brittleness can be modified
by tempering process and transform
to tempered martensite – more
ductile
Heat treatment
• Heat treatment is a controlled
heating and cooling cycles intended
to adjust the microstructure and
mechanical properties of material for
a specific purpose.
Annealling
• The process that consists of three stages:
i. Heating to the desired temperature
ii. Holding or soaking at that temperature
iii. Cooling to room temperature
• Annealing time must be long enough to allow for
necessary transformation reactions.
• Slow cooling is to avoid the cracking of the
materials because of internal stresses
Annealling
• Purpose:
– Relieve stresses
– Increase softness, ductility, toughness
– Produce specific microstructure
Annealling

• Types of annealling:
– Process annealling
– Stress relief
– Full annealling ( for ferrous alloys/steels)
– Normalizing (for ferrous alloys/steels)
– Spheroidizing (for ferrous alloys/steels)
(i) Process annealing
• Purpose:
to remove the effects of cold work,
to soften and increase the ductility
of strain hardened metal.
• Surface oxidation or scaling may be
prevented or minimized by annealing
at relatively low temperature.
(ii) Stress relief
annealing
• To remove the internal residual stresses in metal
in response to the following:
Plastic deformation processes e.g: machining,
grinding
Non uniform cooling of a piece
Phase transformation between phases that
different densities.
• Process: the piece is heated to recommended
temperature, held long enough to attain uniform
temperature and finally cooled to room
temperature.
Annealling of Ferrous alloy
• At lower critical
temperature A1,
austenite phase do not
exist
• At upper critical temp.
A3 and Acm, austenite
phase is exist

Figure: Fe-FeCphase diagram in the


vicinity of the eutectoid, indicating heat-
treating temperature range for plain
carbon steels.
Annealling of Ferous alloy

• Heat treatments techniques include:


– Normalizing
– Full annealling
– Spheroidizing
Normalizing

• Normalizing is accomplished by heating at approximately 55


to 85 oC (100 to 150 oF) above the upper critical
temperature
• Purpose: to refine the grains and produce more uniform and
desirable size distribution.
• After sufficient time has been allowed for the alloy to
completely transform to austenite, the treatment is
terminated by cooling in air
Full annealling

• The steel is treated by heating to temperature


of about 50˚C above A3 or 50˚C above A1. The alloy
is then furnace cooled until room temperature.
• This microstructural product is coarse pealite that is
relatively soft and ductile.
Spheroidizing
• Purpose
– To develop spheroidite structure – maximum
softness and ductility and easily to machine
and deform.
• Process: Heating the alloy below lower
critical temperature and cooling slowly in
the furnace.
Heat treatment of steel
• Quenching
– The steel alloy is heated at austenite
temperature ( > 700C), the alloy is then rapidly
cooled in certain medium e.g: molten salt,
water, oil
– the specimen has been converted to high
content of martensite which is the hardest but
brittle phase.
• Tempering
– Tempering is accomplished by heating a
martensitic steel to below the eutectoid for
specified time period. Normally, tempering is
carried out at temperature between 250 and
650 oC (480 and 1200 F).
– Purpose: to modify brittleness of martensite
and increase the ductility but the strength and
hardness is decreased.
Heat treatment of steels
• Martensite is the hardest
microstructure but brittle that can
be modify by tempering process to
increase the ductility.
• The optimum properties of
quenched and tempered steel is
measured by the composition of
martensite.
Heat treatment of steel
• Martensite formation is depend on :
– Composition of the alloy
– Quenching medium ( water, oil or etc)
– Size and shape of specimen
Heat treatment of steel
• Hardenability
– The ability of a steel alloy to transform
to martensite for a particular quenching
treatment.
– Not ‘hardness’ (resitance to indentation)
– A qualitative measure of the rate at
which hardness drops off with distance
into the interior of the specimen as a
result of diminished martensite.
– A standard is widely utilized to determing
hardenability is the Jominy end-quench
test.
Heat treatment of steels
Heat treatment of steels
• Hardenability curve
• The quenched end is
cooled most rapidly
exhibit maximum
hardness (100%
martensite)
• Cooling rate decrease
with distance from
the quenched end, the
hardness also
decreased
• Thus, a steel that is
highly hardenable will
retain large hardness
values for relatively
long distances.
Precipitation hardening
• The strength of metal
alloys enhanced by the
formation of extremely
small uniformly
dispersed particles of
second phase within
the original phase
matrix.
• Lattice dislocation – the
presence of second
phase is prevent the
movement of
dislocation
Precipitation Hardening
• Solution heat treatment
– At To, all solute atoms are
dissolved to form a single phase
solid solution 

• Rapid cooling (quenching)


– Quenching to temperature T1
– Formation of  + β phase, but the
formation of β phase are
prevented

• Precipitation heat treatment


(aging)
– Supersaturated solid solution is
heated to T2 within  + β two
phase region, where the diffusion
rate becomes appreciable.
– The β precipitates begins to form
as finely dispersed particles
– After appropriate time of aging,
the alloy is cooled to room
temperature.

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