posted on 2014-03-27, 11:20authored byJocelyn S. James
Austempered ductile iron (AD!) is a material which is receiving increasing interest
from the manufacturers of automotive components such as camshafts due to its superior
mechanical properties, and in particular excellent wear resistance, compared with other grades
of cast iron. ADI is produced from a spheroidal graphite casting using a two-stage heattreatment
process. During the first stage of the heat-treatment the matrix is transformed to
austenite, and then in the second austempering stage, some of the austenite is transformed to
bainitic ferrite. The final microstructure is therefore complex, consisting of graphite, bainitic
ferrite, austenite, carbides and possibly martensite.
The major focus of this work has been to develop a novel method of predicting the
effect of composition and heat-treatment parameters on the major constituents of the
microstructure. This has resulted in a single model which can predict a 'microstructural map'
of ADI and will assist the foundry industry in reducing lead times for component manufacture.
The high temperature equilibrium between graphite and austenite was investigated
using Gibbs free energy minimisation in conjunction with critically assessed thermodynamic
data. Having established the carbon concentration in austenite at the start of the austempering
process, the volume fraction of bainitic ferrite was established from prediction of the limiting
carbon content for the diffusionless transformation. The kinetics of the bainite transformation
were determined by making modifications to a model which was originally developed for low
alloy steels. The predictions were compared with experimental data obtained, both during the
course of this research and available in the literature, using dilatometric and X-ray diffraction
techniques.
The kinetics of the austenitisation were investigated through consideration of a
diffusion couple between graphite and austenite. The degree of segregation and formation of
primary carbides, in the original ductile iron casting, was calculated using a Scheil approach
to solidification. The effect of this segregation was subsequently accounted for by making
microstructural predictions on a number of individual 'shells' of material between two
graphite nodules. Finally, complete microstructure predictions were compared with reported
mechanical properties for a range of compositions and heat treatments of austempered ductile
irons.
History
School
Aeronautical, Automotive, Chemical and Materials Engineering