On the critical role of martensite hardening behavior in the paradox of local and global ductility in dual-phase steels
V. Rezazadeh, R. H. J. Peerlings, J. P. M. Hoefnagels, M. G. D. Geers

TL;DR
This paper investigates how martensite hardening behavior influences the paradoxical relationship between local and global ductility in dual-phase steels, revealing that increasing phase contrast enhances global ductility but reduces local ductility.
Contribution
It provides a micromechanical explanation for the ductility paradox in DP steels, highlighting the role of martensite hardening behavior in balancing local and global ductility.
Findings
Higher phase contrast increases global ductility but decreases local ductility.
Martensite's hardening behavior is key to optimizing dual-phase steel performance.
Microstructural heterogeneity leads to early damage at cut edges.
Abstract
Experimental findings in the literature reveal that DP steels with identical strength and composition, but different microstructures, exhibit inconsistent trends under either necking-controlled or damage-controlled ductility tests. A special case of this phenomenon is referred to in the forming community as the cut-edge failure or edge cracking issue of DP steels. It is observed that globally ductile microstructures are prone to premature damage at cut edges while a comparatively less ductile DP steel performs better under the locally applied deformation at such edges. In this paper, a systematical statistical study is conducted to analyse this paradox from a micromechanical point of view. The obtained results qualitatively confirm the experimental observations and allowed us to explain/rationalize them, as follows. To reach a higher necking-controlled ductility, i.e. global ductility,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMicrostructure and Mechanical Properties of Steels · Metal Forming Simulation Techniques · Metallurgy and Material Forming
