Development of Ferritic Rolling Process For The Production of Interstitial Free Automotive Steel
Date
2022
Authors
D., Satish Kumar
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
Interstitial free (IF) grade steels have high transformation temperatures and their
production through austenitic rolling, often results in non-uniform rolling, shape defects
and lower yields. As a solution, soft hot strip and hard hot strip produced through ferritic
rolling is projected as a direct replacement to austenitic cold rolled sheets. However, it is not
industrially adopted due to hot rolling thickness limitations and formability variations. In the
present work a new intermediate approach, consisting of ferritic hot rolling and subsequent
cold rolling and annealing in the existing mills is proposed. However, in this approach, the
combination of hot rolling temperature, cold reduction and annealing parameters governs the
final microstructure and, texture and hence parameters must be optimized. In this work, the
new route was first simulated and optimized for a Ti-Nb interstitial free steel (IF steel) using a
thermo-mechanical simulator and hot strip mill model (HSMM) at different operating regimes.
The best two ferritic rolling regimes were validated in the industrial hot rolling, cold rolling
and annealing mill. Metallurgical and mechanical properties were compared between the
ferritic and austenitic regime rolled sheets at each stage for structure-property comparison.
Key observation was the gradual transition of recrystallization mechanism from oriented
nucleation to oriented growth with the decrease in temperature of deformation in the ferritic
region which changed the formability behaviour of the rolled sheets. As formability is an
important requirement in auto steels, application-specific formability characteristics such as
fracture criterion, stretch-flangeability, deep drawability and stretch formability was studied
through the formability limit diagram, hole expansion ratio, earing and Erichsen cupping tests,
respectively. High temperature ferritic rolled sheets show improved formability in all tests
with higher formability limits in uniaxial tension of FLD, due to better ṙ, higher n-value, low
Δr and stronger gamma fibre maxima at 111<121>. Low temperature ferritic rolled sheets
show the lowest Δr and reduced ṙ but improved n-value and higher limits of biaxial tension in
the FLD curve due to higher alpha fibre texture. Study established that high temperature
ferritic rolled sheets are best suited for deep drawing and stretching applications whereas low
temperature ferritic rolled sheets should be preferred for stretch forming applications. This
intermediate route produced sheets have uniform and improved properties for all formability
applications and lower cost due to reduced energy consumption. This new processing will help
in the wider adoption of the ferritic rolling process on an industrial scale for developing high
formability sheets in cold-rolled and annealed conditions.
Description
Keywords
IF steel, ferritic rolling, thermo-mechanical simulation, texture