Abstract
This research focuses on Fe-18Mn-10Al-1C-5Ni lightweight steel and deeply explores the influences of three different cooling methods, namely, water quenching (WQ), air cooling (AQ), and furnace cooling (FQ), on the precipitation behavior of the B2 phases and κ-carbides in the lightweight steel. The intrinsic relationship among the precipitated phases, mechanical properties, and fracture behavior is revealed. Compared with the WQ sample, the size of the intragranular B2 phase in the AQ sample did not change significantly (an increment of 9 nm), but nano-sized κ-carbides appeared at the grain boundaries and inside the grains. The yield strength and tensile strength of the AQ sample significantly increased to 1232 MPa and 1347 MPa, respectively, while an elongation of 17.4% was still maintained, which benefitted from the synergistic effect of the grain boundary B2, intragranular B2, and nano-sized κ-carbides. When the cooling rate of the heat treatment was further reduced, the size of the intragranular B2 phase in the FQ sample increased slightly (332 nm), and the κ-carbides at the grain boundaries became obviously coarsened (170 nm), resulting in a severe reduction in the elongation (2.3%) because, during the tensile deformation process, the coarsened κ-carbides at the grain boundaries promoted the nucleation of voids and microcracks. The present work provides new insights into the cooling heat treatment process of lightweight steel.