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Sintering microstructure and mechanical properties of PM manganese-molybdenum steels

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dc.creator Youseffi, Mansour
dc.creator Mitchell, Stephen C.
dc.creator Wronski, Andrew S.
dc.creator Cias, A.
dc.date 2008-11-05T15:05:50Z
dc.date 2008-11-05T15:05:50Z
dc.date 2000
dc.identifier Youseffi, M., Mitchell, S.C., Wronski, A.S. and Cias, A. (2000). Sintering microstructure and mechanical properties of PM manganese-molybdenum steels. Powder Metallurgy. Vol. 43, No. 3, pp. 353-358.
dc.identifier http://hdl.handle.net/10454/872
dc.description Yes
dc.description The effects of 0·5 wt-%Mo addition on the processing, microstructure, and strength of PM Fe¿3·5Mn¿0·7C steel are described. Water atomised and sponge irons, Astaloy 1·5Mo, milled ferromanganese, and graphite were the starting powders. During sintering in 75H2 /25N2 or pure hydrogen the dewpoint was controlled and monitored; in particular the effects of improving it from -35 to -60°C were investigated. Faster heating rates (20 K min-1), sufficient gas flowrates, milling the ferro alloy under nitrogen, a low dewpoint (<-60°C), and a getter powder can all contribute to the reduction or prevention of oxidation of the manganese, in particular formation of oxide networks in the sintered steels. For 600 MPa compaction pressure densities up to 7·1 g cm-3 were obtained; these were not significantly affected by sintering at temperatures up to 1180°C. The sintered microstructures were sensitively dependent on the cooling rate. Irrespective of the presence of Mo, slow furnace cooling at 4 K min-1 resulted in mainly pearlitic structures with some ferrite and coarse bainite, whereas fast cooling at 40 K min-1 produced martensite and some retained austenite, very fine pearlite, bainite, and some ferrite. Young's modulus, determined by tensile and ultrasonic tests, was in the range 110¿155 GPa. Sintering with -60°C dewpoint resulted in tensile and transverse rupture strengths of420 and 860 MPa for the Mn steel, rising to 530 and1130 MPa as a result of the Mo addition. This contrasts with strength decreases observed when processing included use of high oxygen containing ferromanganese and sintering with -35°C dewpoint.
dc.language en
dc.relation http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/maney/pm/2000/00000043/00000004/art00004
dc.rights © 2000 Maney and IoM Communications Ltd. Reproduced in accordance with the publisher's self-archiving policy.
dc.subject PM Manganese-Molybdenum Steels
dc.subject Mechanical Properties
dc.subject Sintering
dc.title Sintering microstructure and mechanical properties of PM manganese-molybdenum steels
dc.type Article


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