Login / Signup

Making ultrastrong steel tough by grain-boundary delamination.

L LiuQin YuZ WangJon EllMingxin HuangRobert O Ritchie
Published in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2020)
Developing ultrahigh-strength steels that are ductile, fracture resistant, and cost effective would be attractive for a variety of structural applications. We show that improved fracture resistance in a steel with an ultrahigh yield strength of nearly 2 gigapascals can be achieved by activating delamination toughening coupled with transformation-induced plasticity. Delamination toughening associated with intensive but controlled cracking at manganese-enriched prior-austenite grain boundaries normal to the primary fracture surface dramatically improves the overall fracture resistance. As a result, fracture under plane-strain conditions is automatically transformed into a series of fracture processes in "parallel" plane-stress conditions through the thickness. The present "high-strength induced multidelamination" strategy offers a different pathway to develop engineering materials with ultrahigh strength and superior toughness at economical materials cost.
Keyphrases
  • hip fracture
  • high glucose
  • diabetic rats
  • drug induced
  • endothelial cells
  • stress induced
  • heat stress