Published 2024 | Version v1
Conference proceeding Open

Plasticity experiments on heavy gauge S700 steel

  • 1. ROR icon KU Leuven
  • 2. ArcelorMittal Global
  • 3. University of Ljubljana

Description

Abstract. High Strength Steel grades are indispensable for the development of heavy-duty constructions and components with high specific strength. In these applications, a profound understanding of the plastic material behavior up to fracture is required to assess the structural integrity through numerical simulations. In this paper, we investigate the plastic behavior of S700 with a nominal thickness of 12 mm. The steel production process of a hot rolled, heavy gauge material inherently results in a through-thickness variation of the mechanical properties: i) solidification of the continuously cast slab starts from the outer surface, causing a gradient of the chemical composition across the thickness, ii) subsequent thermomechanical controlled rolling results in a variation of microstructure and texture over the thickness. To enhance the predictive accuracy of numerical simulations, we are examining the manifestation of this inhomogeneity across a range of plasticity experiments.

Notes

The authors gratefully acknowledge the support from the Research Fund for Coal and Steel under grant agreement No 888153 (EU-RFCS 2019 project No. 888153 | vForm-xSteels).

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plasticity experiments on heavy gauge S700 steel.pdf

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Additional details

Funding

European Commission
Vform-xsteels 888153