On the Fracture Behavior of a Creep Resistant 10% Cr Steel with High Boron and Low Nitrogen Contents at Low Temperatures

Materials (Basel). 2019 Dec 18;13(1):3. doi: 10.3390/ma13010003.

Abstract

An advanced, high chromium, creep-resistant steel was subjected to the tensile tests and three-point bending tests of Charpy V-notch specimens at temperatures of -196 to 20 °C. The steel exhibited ductile fracture under tension tests at all of the temperatures studied. The mechanical properties, i.e., strength and uniform elongation, were enhanced with a decrease in temperature down to -140 °C. Transgranular, dimpled fracture remained the primary fracture mechanism under tension. On the other hand, the results obtained with Charpy V-notch specimens suggested the ductile-brittle transition (DBT). Full embrittlement was observed at temperatures of -60 °C and -150 °C upon impact tests and three-point bending tests, respectively, when the unstable crack started to propagate without remarkable plastic deformation. The DBT temperature of -27 °C for the present steel corresponded to the 28 J impact transition temperature, T28J, when the maximum impact stress matched the maximal true tensile stress.

Keywords: bending test; brittle–ductile transition; fracture; martensitic steel; tensile test.