1. Analysis of the fracture mechanism at cryogenic temperatures of thick 316LN laser welded joints.
- Author
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Xin, Jijun, Fang, Chao, Huang, Chuanjun, Yang, Wuxiong, Dai, Wenhua, Zhang, Hengcheng, Wei, Jing, Li, Laifeng, Wu, Jiefeng, and Song, Yuntao
- Subjects
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LASER welding , *FRACTOGRAPHY , *FRACTURE toughness testing , *DUCTILE fractures , *FIBER lasers , *GRAIN size - Abstract
Laser welding of modified 316LN steel with a thickness of 20 mm was conducted using a YLS-20000 fiber laser. The microstructure of the weld joint was characterized and tensile and fracture toughness tests were carried out. The microstructure evolution of the fracture specimens was studied systematically to elucidate the fracture mechanism. The weld was composed of the single austenite phase and was characterized by cellular and columnar grains, and the grain size became coarser with a weak orientation. The R m values of the laser welded joints were almost equal to that of the base metal both at RT and 4.2 K, and the fracture surfaces were featured by ductile fracture with quantities of dimples and microvoids. The fracture toughness of the weldments decreased to ˜84% of that of the parent metal at 4.2 K. Enhancement of the fracture toughness was attributed predominantly to the presence of twins and to the fine grain size, and the reduction was caused by the partially stress-induced phase transformation of the austenite to martensite. The synergistic effects of these factors result in a favorable improvement in the fracture toughness of the weldment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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