Fracture and Crack Propagation Behavior of 560 MPa Microalloyed Pipeline Steel under Different Cooling Schedules

2017 
Three kinds of pipeline steel with different microstructures were fabricated by varying cooling schedules during thermo-mechanical controlled processing (TMCP). Charpy impact property of the pipeline steels were obtained, and the fracture and crack-arrest mechanisms were further studied. The results indicated that the steels were classified into two kinds according to their microstructures, the mixture of acicular ferrite (AF), quasi-polygonal ferrite (QF), granular bainite (GB) and small fraction of degenerate pearlite (DP), and the mixed microstructure of AF and GB, respectively. The processed steel with microstructure of AF and GB exhibited more excellent low-temperature toughness and crack-arrest properties with upper shelf energy of ~281 J and energy transition temperature of ~-76°C. The mixed microstructure (AF + GB) possessing smaller effective grain size hindered the propagating of crack and consumed large amount of energy during fracture. The effective grain size of microstructure was the dominant factor controlling low-temperature toughness and crack-arrest properties of pipeline steel, which increased the high-angle boundary length per unit area and further increased the crack propagation energy during fracture.
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