
Jan-Eric Ståhl
Professor

Characterization of Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of High Chromium Cast Irons Using SEM and Nanoindentation
Author
Summary, in English
The effects of composition changes and heat treatment on the microstructure and mechanical properties of high-chromium white cast irons were studied in order to characterize possible improvements in product performance and machinability. Materials characterization was performed using nanoindentation, SEM, and EDS techniques. Present results show that changes in carbon and silicon contents as well as heat treatment strongly affect the mechanical properties and their variation in the material. In the as-cast condition, the sample with relatively lower carbon and silicon contents has an austenite-martensite matrix and is much harder than the sample with relatively higher carbon and silicon contents having more eutectic carbides in a bainite matrix. Annealing leads to softening of the materials relative to the as-cast condition, with the relatively higher carbon-silicon material being marginally harder due to the presence of more eutectic carbides. A similar trend is seen after the hardening treatment, and the presence of primary carbide can restrict the extent of hardening due to the loss of alloying elements from the matrix.
Department/s
- Production and Materials Engineering
- Materials Engineering
- SPI: Sustainable Production Initiative
Publishing year
2015
Language
English
Pages
98-105
Publication/Series
Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance
Volume
24
Issue
1
Document type
Journal article
Publisher
Springer
Topic
- Materials Engineering
Keywords
- heat treatment
- microstructure
- nanoindentation
- SEM
- white cast iron
Status
Published
ISBN/ISSN/Other
- ISSN: 1059-9495