Institute of Metals Division - Tensile Properties of Wrought Austenitic Manganese Steel in the Temperature Range from +100 to -196°C.

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
H. C. Doepken
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
5
File Size:
386 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1953

Abstract

Wrought Hadfield steel was tested in axial tension at from 100° to —196°C, to determine flow and fracture stresses as well as conventional properties. Ductility and related properties, such as fracture stress, decreased continuously with temperature. Peculiarities during straining indicated possible martensite formation or mechanical twinning. THE mechanical properties of austenitic manganese steel have been summarized by Avery and Day,' including the low temperature tensile properties reported by Hadfield and coworkers2,3 " These data show the material to be brittle at both liquid oxygen and liquid 'hydrogen temperatures. Avery and Day report considerable ductility measured by Charpy V-notch tests at —100°F (-73°C). Since the review of low temperature properties by Seigle and Brick' show face-centered cubic structures, other than Hadfield steel, to be ductile at low temperatures, it was felt that a study of tensile properties, between the reported intervals, should show whether the decrease in ductility was a gradual decline or an abrupt drop beginning at some intermediate point. X-ray examinations were made in an attempt to shed further light on the mechanism of work hardening of austenitic manganese steel. The presence of a magnetic constituent has been found by Hall" and by Avery, Homerberg, and Cook." Krivobok7 demonstrated the growth of magnetic constituents on reheating cold-worked specimens. Hadfield2,3 ' and Goss found no a iron. The steel from which the specimens were taken was commercial hot rolled % in. diam rod of electric furnace steel. The ladle analysis was as follows: C, 1.40 pct: Mn, 12.11; P, 0.060; S, 0.012; Si, 0.120; Ni, 0.080; and Cr, 0.090. Fifteen specimens, 6 in. long, were cut from a
Citation

APA: H. C. Doepken  (1953)  Institute of Metals Division - Tensile Properties of Wrought Austenitic Manganese Steel in the Temperature Range from +100 to -196°C.

MLA: H. C. Doepken Institute of Metals Division - Tensile Properties of Wrought Austenitic Manganese Steel in the Temperature Range from +100 to -196°C.. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1953.

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