The present invention relates to the shaping of stainless steel sheets and more particularly to those having high mechanical resistances.
Stainless steel sheets are widely used in the automotive, construction and industry sectors in general, because of their excellent corrosion resistance. Within the scope of these applications, these sheets are more generally shaped so as to be, for example, used in the form of profiles, square tubes, bumper beams, shafts, doorframes. These shaping operations are most often achieved by bending, profiling and die-stamping.
The use, within the scope of these applications of stainless steel grades having high mechanical resistance, greater than 780 MPa, is made very difficult by an elongation at break which rapidly decreases with the increase in the break resistance. This phenomenon is the source of many drawbacks:
A solution consists of locally treating the area to be shaped so as to facilitate deformation. U.S. Pat. No. 5,735,163 thereby describes a method for shaping blanks in which a local portion of the blank is hardened before shaping. This hardening is generated by providing strong density energy. The rise in temperature which results therefrom causes transformation of the local microstructure into martensite or into bainite, which locally increases mechanical resistance. In the case of stamping, by forming hardened lines parallel to the direction of the deformation it is possible to avoid the failure of not very die stampable grades. In the case of bending, the structural transformation related to the formation of martensite or bainite on the outer side of the blank to be bent generates a local compressive stress. During the bending, this stress partly cancels out the extension stress generated by the bending, thereby limiting springback.
Because of the reduction of springback, this method only solves one of the problems mentioned above. Further, because of the local hardening which it generates, this method cannot be applied to steels having high mechanical resistance, already sufficiently difficult to apply. Finally, this method assumes the use of steels capable of undergoing a martensitic or bainitic phase transformation during annealing followed by quenching, which in fact limits its use to carbon-manganese steels.
The object of the present disclosure is to facilitate the shaping of stainless steel sheets having high mechanical resistance. It was designed and carried out in order to overcome the defects shown earlier and for obtaining other advantages.
For this purpose, the first object of the disclosure is a stainless steel sheet containing a minimum of 10.5% by weight of Cr and a maximum of 1.2% by weight of C, the microstructure of which is martensitic or austeno-martensitic and comprises at least 2% by volume of martensite. This metal sheet is essentially characterized in that in comprises at least one local portion of lesser mechanical resistance, having a martensite content at least 10% less than of that of the remainder of said metal sheet; said local portion being at least partly with a thickness equal to that of said sheet.
The steel sheet according to the disclosure with a thickness e, may also comprise the optional following features, taken individually or as a combination:
Therefore, it will be understood that the solution to the posed technical problem consists of locally treating areas of the sheet so as to lower the mechanical resistance and thereby facilitate deformation thereof.
A second object of the disclosure is formed by a method for manufacturing a steel sheet according to the disclosure, essentially comprising the steps according to which:
The method according to the disclosure may also comprise the optional following feature:
A third object of the disclosure is formed by a steel part which may be obtained by deformation of a steel sheet according to the disclosure or of a sheet obtained with the method according to the disclosure, said deformation occurring in at least one of said local portions with lesser mechanical resistance.
The part according to the disclosure may also comprise the following optional features:
Other features and advantages of the disclosure will become apparent upon reading the description which follows.
The terms 2H, C700 to C1300 (so-called work-hardened state), 1E, 1D, 2B, 2D, 2R, 2E (so-called annealed state), notably relate to the standards which define the manufacturing ranges and the technical conditions for delivering the relevant steels (NF EN 10088-1 and -2 for stainless steels). C1500 will designate a manufacturing range with work-hardening 2H guaranteeing a mechanical resistance greater than 1,500 MPa.
The stainless steel sheets considered by the present disclosure are characterized by their mechanical resistance. The latter is controlled by the additive elements on the one hand, but also by the heat treatments and the mechanical treatments to which the sheet may be subject.
The additive elements define the base grade of the relevant sheet and therefore its intrinsic mechanical resistance. Within the scope of the present disclosure, by a stainless steel with an austenitic structure is meant a sheet comprising in weight percent:
0.0001≦Nb≦1
The remainder of the composition consisting of iron and of inevitable impurities due to the elaboration.
It being further understood that the contents observe the following relationships:
Creq=% Cr+1.37% Mo+1.5% Si+2% Nb+3% Ti
Nieq=% Ni+0.31% Mn+22% C+14.2% N+% Cu
α′(30/20)=374.05−3.73% Cr−23.03% Ni−503.11% C−161.70% N−21.55% Mn
This composition characterizes an austenitic stainless steel which solidifies into a primary ferrite and which contains a non-zero amount of work-hardening martensite after deformation. Although consisting in majority of austenite, conventional austenitic grades contain trace amounts of residual ferrites from the solidification as well as trace amounts of martensite resulting from lamination operations.
The heat treatment and the mechanical treatment, either alone or combined, as for them, allow modification of this mechanical resistance in a certain proportion.
The present disclosure notably considers two possible alternatives:
In both cases, modification of the mechanical characteristics is made possible by the capability of the relevant sheet of undergoing phase transformations on the one hand and variations in the density of dislocations on the other hand.
In the case of the first considered alternative, homogeneous work/hardening (manufacturing range 2H: C700 to C1500) over the entirety of the sheet causes partial transformation of austenite into martensite and optionally hardening of the austenite by densification of the dislocation network. This work-hardening gives the possibility of attaining mechanical resistances much greater than 780 MPa, a maximum value which may be reached on an annealed stainless steel of the type 1D, 1E, 2B, 2D, 2E, 2R. The thereby work-hardened steel is with an austeno-martensitic structure i.e. consisting at ordinary temperature of a mixture of austenite and martensite, the volume fraction of martensite being at least 2%. In a second step, heat treatment localized in the areas to be deformed causes partial reversion of the martensite into austenite and possibly softening of the austenite by the decrease in the number of dislocations. With this heat treatment, it is possible to locally lower the mechanical resistance of the sheet. A portion with a lesser mechanical resistance is thereby obtained. This mechanical resistance may be lowered down to 500 MPa, a minimum value which may be reached on an annealed austenitic stainless steel. This heat treatment may be carried out, without this list being exhaustive, by laser, by induction, by an electron beam or by seam welding. Regardless of the technique used, the thermal cycle notably comprises a rise in temperature above the temperature of the onset of transformation of the martensite into austenite, called the reversion temperature of martensite. This temperature depends on the relevant steel grade but within the scope of the disclosure and in order to cover the whole of the austenitic grades, the reversion temperature is assumed to be greater than 550° C. The durations of the heat treatment, of the heating, of the maintaining and cooling depend on the grade of the sheet, on its thickness and on the method used: they have to be determined beforehand and should allow a minimum 10% decrease of the martensite volume fraction and possibly of the dislocation density. This minimum decrease gives the possibility of getting rid of the local variations inherent to the work-hardening method. Partial melting of the steel at the surface of the sheet and over a thickness not exceeding 0.5e is acceptable. The heat-treated area is quenched by self-cooling, the heat being transmitted to the neighboring areas. This phenomenon suppresses the control of the quenching parameters for obtaining a sheet according to the disclosure.
In the case of the second considered alternative (inhomogeneous mechanical treatment), work-hardening is carried out by means of structured lamination cylinders. Work-hardening of stainless steels is usually carried out with smooth rolls. In the present case, these cylinders are engraved or splined so that portions of the work-hardened sheet are spared by this work-hardening and thus preserve their less work-hardened austenitic structure. This specific work-hardening is designated as differential work-hardening. Portions of lesser mechanical resistance are thereby obtained.
Regardless of the alternative views, the operating conditions are controlled so as to observe the following conditions:
The presence on the stainless steel sheet of portions of lesser mechanical resistance, obtained by either one of the alternatives described above, allows:
severe bending of this sheet up to angles of 180° and down to minimum bending radii with a value of 0.5 time the thickness of the sheet
In the case of a stainless steel sheet according to the disclosure, having undergone local treatment, the advantage provided by the slight coloration of the sheet generated by this heat treatment will also be noted: it allows localization of the area to be deformed without any difficulty. In the case of a stainless steel sheet according to the disclosure having undergone differential work-hardening, the localization of the area to be deformed is made possible by a less shiny aspect and a different roughness of the local portion.
A stainless steel sheet according to the disclosure may be shaped according to the usual techniques well known to one skilled in the art, from which bending, profiling, die stamping may be mentioned as examples. During this shaping, the portion of lesser mechanical resistance which encompasses the deformed area, undergoes work-hardening. By partial transformation of the austenite into martensite and possibly hardening of the austenite by densification of the network of dislocations, it is possible to at least partly find again the initial microstructure of this portion of the sheet. In the cases of deformation modes for which there exists a neutral fiber, a steel part, shaped at least at one of the portions of lesser mechanical resistance of a steel sheet according to the disclosure, is characterized by the presence, in the vicinity of the neutral fiber of an area having a lower martensite content than that of the sheet. The detection of this area may be accomplished by measuring residual stresses or by measuring the martensite fraction. By neutral fiber is meant the whole of the points which, in the case of application of an overall deformation, do not undergo local deformation.
A steel part, shaped at least at one of the portions of lesser mechanical resistance of a steel sheet according to the disclosure allows:
Moreover, the local portions of lesser mechanical resistance may not be shaped and may be used as preferential deformation areas during a dynamic stress, typically at a deformation rate comprised between 1 and 1,000s−1 like in a crash.
In order to illustrate the disclosure, tests were carried out and will be described as non limiting examples, notably with reference to
The measurement of the martensite content is carried out by local measurement of magnetic induction by means of a ferritescope. This measurement gives an average volume percentage of martensite on the thickness of the sheet. This indirect measurement assumes the use of a corrective factor depending on the relevant steel grade. In the case of a stainless steel 1.4318 (301 LN) or 1.4310(301), the corrective factor is 1.7. Direct measurement by signametry (saturation magnetic induction) may also be contemplated, although more restrictive to apply.
With reference to
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According to a preferred embodiment, a work-hardened stainless steel 1.4318 (301 LN) is used such that its mechanical resistance Rm (conventional maximum tensile stress) is at least 1,000 MPa (C1000 state of the manufacturing range 2H according to the EN 10088/2). In this example, the thickness of the sheet is 0.8 mm and the metal contains about 45% by volume of martensite and 55% by volume of austenite.
A localized heat treatment, along one line, is carried out by means of a laser of the CO2 type of 4 kW. The power in the present case is 20%, the displacement of the source is 0.85 m/min (1 m/min also tested) and the focal point is located at 25 mm above the upper surface of the sheet. With reference to
Bending tests are carried out on the thereby treated C1000 sheets according to the disclosure and on untreated sheets. It is observed that the bending of the sheet C1000 treated according to the disclosure is possible up to angles of 180° without any difficulty, like for the annealed sheet 2B. On the other hand, bending is difficult at 90° with the untreated C1000 sheet, with the presence of small cracks, and impossible at 180° with sometimes complete failure of the test specimen (Tab.1).
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR09/01110 | 9/21/2009 | WO | 00 | 6/5/2012 |