Mechanical Engineering Faculty Research
Title
Deformation-induced Martensite and Nanotwins by Cryogenic Laser Shock Peening of AISI 304 Stainless Steel and the Effects on Mechanical Properties
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
2012
Abstract
Laser shock peening (LSP) of stainless steel 304 was carried out at room and cryogenic temperature (liquid nitrogen temperature). It was found that the deformation-induced martensite was generated by LSP only when the laser-generated plasma pressure is sufficiently high. Compared to room temperature laser shock peening (RT-LSP), cryogenic laser shock peening (CLSP) generates a higher volume fraction of martensite at the same laser intensity. This is due to the increase in the density of potential embryos (deformation bands) for martensite nucleation by deformation at cryogenic temperature. In addition, CLSP generates a high density of deformation twins and stacking faults. After CLSP, an innovative microstructure, characterized networks of deformation twins, stacking faults and composite structure (martensite and austenite phases), contributes to material strength and microstructure stability improvement. The combined effect of higher surface hardness and a more stabilized microstructure results in greater fatigue performance improvement of the CLSP samples compared to that of the RT-LSP samples.
Publication Title
Philosophical Magazine
Volume
92
Issue
11
First Page
1369
Last Page
1389
Recommended Citation
Ye, Chang; Suslov, Sergey; Lin, Dong; and Cheng, Gary J., "Deformation-induced Martensite and Nanotwins by Cryogenic Laser Shock Peening of AISI 304 Stainless Steel and the Effects on Mechanical Properties" (2012). Mechanical Engineering Faculty Research. 739.
https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/mechanical_ideas/739