The present invention relates to railroad tank cars and more specifically to railroad tank cars produced from steel alloy plates. Most specifically the invention relates to railroad tank cars produced from steel alloy plates having improved toughness and puncture resistance.
Historically railroad tank car manufacturers have been using TC 128 Gr B steel plates for making tank car heads and occasionally ASTM A516-70 steel plates depending on carrier contents. The steel plates are formed in to tank car heads either in ambient temperature after normalizing or at an elevated temperature (slightly above the Ar3 temperature) and then normalized. The full tank car body is then given a post weld heat treatment (PWHT) at 600-650° C. for an hour. So, the specified material properties are to be guaranteed in normalized and PWHT condition.
Tables 1 and 2 show the chemical and mechanical property requirements for the current TC 128 Gr B steel. Traditionally, the steel manufacturers have been using high C and Mn in order to meet the minimum tensile strength requirements as higher carbon equivalence (CE) guarantees higher pearlite contents and thereby higher tensile strength. Microalloying with Nb has rarely been opted or encouraged because of concerns of HAZ (Heaty Affected Zone) and weld metal toughness. Table 1 shows the chemical composition of current TC128 Gr B steel used by tank car manufactures in wt. %.
Table 2 shows specified mechanical properties in current TC128 Gr B steel used by tank car manufactures. 2″ GL is the 2-inch gauge length of the tensile specimen. The minimum longitudinal impact energy is 20.3 J at −45.5° C. and minimum transverse impact energy is 20.3 J at −34.4° C.
Because of use of high C, Mn and other alloying elements the normalized microstructures of TC 128 Gr B steel plates often indicate a heavily banded ferrite-pearlite microstructure with streaks of martensite within the bands.
Table 3 indicates the composition of the alloy of the photomicrograph of
Recently, in the context of several tank car accidents, the Association of American Railroads (AAR) has mandated newer safety regulations for tank cars requiring tougher and more puncture-resistant steels. Thus, there is a need in the art for railroad tank cars produced from steels that guarantee higher puncture resistance.
The present invention relates to a railroad tank car formed of steel alloy having improved toughness and puncture resistance. The railroad tank car is formed of steel alloy plate which comprises a steel alloy including in wt %: C: 0.1-0.15; Mn: 1.0-1.65; Si: 0.15-0.40; Al: 0.015-0.06; Mo: 0.1-0.3; Ni: 0.1-0.25; Nb: 0.015-0.045; Ti: up to 0.02; Cr: up to 0.22; V: up to 0.08; Cu: up to 0.35; P: max 0.025; S: max 0.015; and N: 0.004-0.01. The alloy plate may have been normalized for 30 to 60 minutes at 900° C. The alloy plate may have a tensile strength of at least 560 MPa; a yield strength of at least 345 MPa; an elongation of at least 22%; a CVN impact toughness of at least 135.5 J at −34.4° C.; a CVN impact toughness of at least 122 J at −45.5° C. The alloy plate may have a ferrite-bainite microstructure with 10% or less pearlite, preferably 5% or less, and most preferably 1% or less pearlite. The inventive alloy plate may have an absence of any banded ferrite-pearlite/martensite structure.
The steel alloy plate may contain 0.018 wt. % Nb and may have a tensile strength of at least 575 MPa; a yield strength of at least 425 MPa; an elongation of at least 33%; a CVN impact toughness of at least 176.25 J at −34.4° C.; and a CVN impact toughness of at least 203.3 J at −45.5° C.
The steel alloy plate may contain 0.032 wt. % Nb and may have a tensile strength of at least 580 MPa; a yield strength of at least 460 MPa; an elongation of at least 33%; a CVN impact toughness of at least 156 J at −34.4° C.; and a CVN impact toughness of at least 128.8 J at −45.5° C.
The steel alloy plate may contain 0.045 wt. % Nb. The steel alloy plate may have been subjected to a post weld heat treatment of 30-60 mins at 600-650° C.
The present invention relates to inventive railroad tank cars formed of plates of a new TC 128 chemistry within the stipulated compositional limits of TC 128 to significantly improve the toughness values. The newer chemistry significantly lowers the carbon content so that both the upper shelf as well as transition temperature is improved. Any loss in tensile strength due to the reduction of carbon is mitigated by (i) inducing a finer ferrite grain size due to addition of Nb, (ii) changes of microstructure from a predominantly ferrite-pearlite to ferrite-bainite through addition of Mo and (iii) some low-temperature precipitation contribution through alloying with Nb and Mo.
Significantly, the prior art teaches away from adding Nb to tank car alloys. For example, the journal article “Effect of Nb on Weld Metal Toughness in Tank Car Steels”, 1995 ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, RTD-Vol. 10, ed. R. R. Newman, Nov. 12-17, 1995, San Francisco, Calif., pp. 109-117 teaches:
Further, “Effects of Niobium, Titanium and Nitrogen on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Normalized Tank Car Steel Plates”, Materials Science and Technology (MS&T) 2007 Sep. 16-20, 2007, Detroit, Mich., STEEL: 4th International Symposium on Railroad Tank Cars teaches:
Again, Nb was shown to be detrimental to TC128 Grade B simulated HAZ toughness in C. Shah, “Effect of Nb additions on Welding Heat Affected Zone (HAZ) Toughness of 0.2 wt % C Ferrite-Pearlite Steels,” MS Thesis in Metallurgical and Materials Engineering, IIT Chicago 2002. Also C. Shah and P. Nash, 45th Mechanical Working and Steel Processing Conference Nov. 10-12, 2003.
In another example, adding Nb to laboratory heats of TC128 Grade B did not provide meaningful benefits to the mechanical properties of base metal: strength and toughness (especially upper shelf) P. J. Kyed, M. Manohar and R. L. Bodnar, “Effects of Niobium Content and Heat Treatment on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Railroad Pressure Tank Car Steel Plates,” 45th Mechanical Working and Steel Processing Conference Proceedings, ISS, Vol. 41, 2003, pp. 43-55.
Contrary to all of these (and more) prior art teachings, the present inventors have determined that the addition of Nb at low levels does not interfere with HAZ toughness when, as in the instant invention, the carbon was significantly reduced. The lowering of the carbon level improves the weldability and HAZ toughness and reduces the PWHT time significantly thereby reducing the operating costs.
Broadly the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars include in wt %: C: 0.1-0.15; Mn: 1.0-1.65; Si: 0.15-0.40; Al: 0.015-0.06; Mo: 0.1-0.3; Ni: 0.1-0.25; Nb: 0.015-0.045; Ti: up to 0.02; Cr: up to 0.22; V: up to 0.08; Cu: up to 0.35; P: max 0.025; S: max 0.015; and N: 0.004-0.01. Table 4 shows the more preferred ranges of the chemical compositions of the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars.
Three different compositions varying only in Nb contents were melted in laboratory vacuum induction furnace and cast in 50 kg ingots. The compositions of the three alloys are presented in Table 5. The cast billets (125×125×250 mm in sizes) were hot rolled using industrial practices to 22 mm thick plates and then normalized. Normalization is an annealing process applied to ferrous alloys to give the material a uniform fine-grained structure and to avoid excess softening in steel. It involves heating the steel to 20-50° C. above its upper critical point, soaking it for a short period at that temperature and then cooling it in air to room temperature.
The inventors determined that normalizing for 30 mins at 900° C. resulted in about the same tensile properties as normalizing for 60 mins at 900° C. Therefore, all the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars disclosed hereinafter were normalized at 900° C. for 30 minutes.
The transverse tensile properties of the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars with various Nb contents are shown in Table 6 in normalized and PWHT condition. In all Nb levels, the minimum tensile strength meets the required specification for TC 128. The yield strength shows a maximum at 0.032 wt. % of Nb.
The microstructures of normalized and PWHT steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars (with 0.018, 0.032 and 0.045 Nb content, respectively) are shown in
Since microalloying with Nb was an integral part of the alloy design, a weldability evaluation was carried out to examine the CGHAZ (coarse grain heat affected zone) toughness for the three steels with different Nb contents. It is to be noted that tank car manufacturers are conservative about niobium's influence on the HAZ and weld metal toughness, especially with the typical higher carbon levels in prior art TC 128 steel alloys. The present inventors therefore examined the microalloying influence on the HAZ toughness for Nb levels up to 0.045 wt. %. Laboratory heats with Nb contents of 0.018, 0.032 and 0.045 wt. % were processed to 22 mm thick plates and then normalized for welding study.
The CGHAZ toughness of the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars was tested after a high heat input welding process (110-120 kJ/in) employing only two passes, one pass each side. A two-pass submerged arc welding (SAW) at high heat inputs (˜105 kJ/inch) is considered to be the most conservative test condition that the new steel could be subjected to for tank car application. Steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars (as listed in Table 9) were formed. Each plate edge was beveled 40 degrees on each side (front/back) as per welding specification and welded using an LA-85 consumable and 882 flux at heat inputs between 93-105 kJ/inch. An interpass temperature of 150° C. was maintained. For comparison, a commercially produced TC 128 plate was also welded at similar welding parameters. The plates were subsequently heat treated at 600° C. for 30 minutes (as per industry PWHT standards for tank cars).
The HAZ toughness for the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars which was welded by the SAW process was excellent at all test temperatures with a significant upper shelf energy value. The toughness values were also significantly higher than that obtained for the prior art TC 128 steel. Thus, the steel alloy plates of the inventive railroad tank cars successfully met the HAZ toughness requirements.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2018/059773 | Dec 2018 | IB | international |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB2019/059989 | 11/20/2019 | WO | 00 |