Microstructural Features Intimated in Automotive Grade IF Steel Subjected to Conventional and Severe Shot Peening
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Date
2024
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Publisher
Springer
Abstract
A significant amount of interstitial-free or IF steel is used to manufacture automotive body parts due to its high ductility, high formability, and low yield strength. But, the major drawback of this steel is the lower surface hardness. The current investigation intended to enhance the surface hardness by employing shot peening at different coverages. The work also studied the microstructural features intimated after the treatment and its effect on the surface hardness. The optical and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) results showed a prominent grain refinement and dislocation hardening, which improved the micro-hardness to 2.5 times. Tri-junctions, sub-grains, twins, nanocrystalline regions, and several dislocation-induced microstructural features, like dislocation bands, dislocation forests, dislocation walls, dislocation cell structure, etc., were detected in the samples after peening. These features bear a beneficial impact on the surface hardness of the substrate. A spatial filter (Sobel filter) was used to refine the image and detect the presence of NbC precipitates near the grain boundary. Using Gatan DigitalMicrograph software, the thermal imaging technique effectively identified thinner grain boundaries near the segregation zone. © ASM International 2024.
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Keywords
Backscattering, Forestry, Grain boundaries, Grain size and shape, High resolution transmission electron microscopy, Infrared imaging, Light transmission, Microhardness, Nanocrystals, Automotive-grade, Dislocation, Dislocation forest, Grain-boundaries, Grains refinement, IF steel, Microstructural features, Shot-peening, Sobel filter, Surface hardness, Grain refinement
Citation
Metallography, Microstructure, and Analysis, 2024, 13, 5, pp. 792-806
