C. I. Garcia
University of Pittsburgh
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Featured researches published by C. I. Garcia.
Scripta Metallurgica Et Materialia | 1993
Mingjian Hua; C. I. Garcia; Anthony J. DeArdo
In Ti-stabilized interstitial-free (IF) steels, TiS and Ti[sub 4]C[sub 2]S[sub 2] have been found to dominate the precipitation process in the temperature range 1,300 C to 1,000 C. In this current work, Ti[sub 4]C[sub 2]S[sub 2] and TiS have been found to coexist within the same precipitate, forming a sandwich-like composite particle. This particle has an inner layer of Ti[sub 4]C[sub 2]S[sub 2] and two outer layers of TiS. In addition, the proportion of these layers in any given composite particle has been found to vary with processing condition. A detailed discussion of these observations will be presented in a later publication. The purpose of this paper is to describe a few examples of the internal structure and the orientation relationship found between Ti[sub 4]C[sub 2]S[sub 2] and TiS inside the sandwich-like composite particles.
Materials Science and Technology | 2009
Anthony J. DeArdo; M. Hua; K. Cho; C. I. Garcia
Abstract In the mid-1950s, hot rolled carbon steels exhibited high carbon contents, coarse ferrite pearlite microstructures, and yield strengths near 300 MPa. Their ductility, toughness and weldability were poor. Today, a half century later, hot rolled steels can exhibit microstructures consisting of mixtures of ferrite, bainite and martensite in various proportions. These structures are very fine and can show yield strengths over 900 MPa, with acceptable levels of ductility, toughness and weldability. This advancement was made possible by the combination of improved steelmaking, microalloying technology and better rolling and cooling practices. The purpose of this paper is to chronicle some of the remarkable progress in steel alloy and process design that has resulted in this impressive achievement.
Materials and Manufacturing Processes | 2010
Anthony J. DeArdo; C. I. Garcia; K. Cho; M. Hua
From the late 1960s through the late 1970s, high strength microalloyed steels hot rolled to strip and plate exhibited ferrite-pearlite microstructures with yield strengths essentially limited to the range of 350–420 MPa. However, the advent of the energy crisis of the late 1970s led to the demand for steels of higher strengths, while maintaining acceptable levels of other properties such as weldability, toughness, and formability. Since the late 1970s, it has been recognized that the strengthening mechanisms present in ferrite-pearlite steels had reached their limit in terms of grain refinement and solute and precipitation hardening; hence the barrier of 350–420 MPa was a real restraint. At about the same time, it was also recognized that higher strengths in as-processed steels could only be achieved through the use of ferrite of lower temperature formation, i.e., non-polygonal, acicular, bainitic, or martensitic ferrite, either as a monolithic matrix microstructure or as a combination. This change in achievable microstructures was abetted by interrupted accelerated cooling, either on the runout table of a strip mill or after the finishing pass in a plate mill. Hence, high strength hot rolled or the later cold work and annealing (CRA) and/or continuous galvanizing line (CGL) processed steels, with strengths in excess of 420 MPa, now exhibit these complex microstructures. It is not uncommon today for a 490 MPa yield strength steel to exhibit a microstructure comprised of several types of microsconstituents: non-polygonal ferrite, bainite, martensite, and perhaps retained austenite. Traditional metallographic techniques are no longer capable of analyzing these complex microstructures, especially in a quantitative fashion. The inability to characterize and quantify these complex microstructures means that the true strengthening mechanisms operative in these steels may be incorrectly understood and evaluated. The recent application of the quantitative analysis of the image quality (IQ) of the Kikuchi pattern resulting from the Electron Bank Scattered Diffraction (EBSD-IQ) has led to an innovative way to quantitatively analyze complex microstructures in the higher strength steels. This article will present the technique and show where it has been used successfully in research studies involving a broad range of steels including high strength low alloy (HSLA), MA, DP, and TRIP steels.
Scripta Metallurgica Et Materialia | 1993
P. Pouly; M. Hua; C. I. Garcia; Anthony J. DeArdo
During the last few years near-gamma TiAl alloys have been considered as viable engineering materials for aerospace applications. A substantial amount of research effort has been directed towards the understanding of the microstructure-property relationship of these alloys. Similarly, fundamental studies have been conducted to understand the phase transformation mechanisms of single and two-phase titanium aluminides. The results of these studies have clearly established four types of microstructures: fully-lamellar, massive, equiaxed and duplex (lamellar + equiaxed). The two former types are developed through heating and cooling from the [alpha] phase region. Slow cooling produces the fully-lamellar structure and fast cooling leads to the massive microstructure. The two other types result from heating to and cooling from the ([alpha] + [gamma]) intercritical region. The development of the duplex or equiaxed structure depends on both the reheating temperature and holding time. The fully lamellar microstructure exhibits the best combination of mechanical properties at both room and high temperatures when compared to the other microstructures.
Materials and Manufacturing Processes | 2007
Jinghui Wu; Peter J. Wray; C. I. Garcia; M. Hua; Anthony J. DeArdo
The image quality of the diffraction pattern from EBSD has been used as an index distinguishing the degree of lattice imperfection. Since austenite decomposition products formed at different transformation temperatures have various dislocation or sub-grain boundary densities, this technique has been used to identify, group, and quantify the different types of ferrite. This article presents a study where the dislocation density variation, associated with different cooling rates from the austenite in a commercial IF steel, will be analyzed using this image quality analysis. Perhaps the most significant contribution of this work is the new insight into the strengthening mechanisms found in these steels.
Materials Science Forum | 1998
V. Thillou; M. Hua; C. I. Garcia; C. Perdrix; Anthony J. DeArdo
Two low-carbon microalloyed steels were investigated: 0.07C-0.02Nb-0.33Mn and 0.07C-0.028Nb-1.1Mn. The two steels were hot rolled in a similar way, followed by either air cooling to room temperature (ACRT) or accelerated cooling (AC) to 680°C and held isothermally at 650°C for various times prior to ACRT. The mechanical properties of the steels in their fully-processed condition were evaluated. As expected, the steel with the higher Mn content showed the highest tensile (YS and UTS) properties for all processing conditions. The results of this study also indicated that the tensile properties of both steels remained unchanged, prior to and after the isothermal treatments. The central goal of this study was to conduct a detailed microstructural analysis which could help in the understanding of the observed mechanical properties. The results from the ACRT samples after hot rolling revealed two distinct precipitation sequences: (i) precipitation of fine NbC (5 nm in average size) in austenite, and (ii) interphase and multivariant precipitation of NbC in ferrite. The samples which were AC and then held isothermally also exhibited fine NbC precipitates. All the precipitates observed in these samples had formed in austenite. The absence of the Baker-Nutting (B-N) orientation relationship clearly confirmed that precipitation in ferrite did not take place. Atom Probe analysis of the precipitates revealed that the stoichiometry of the precipitates was close to NbC 0.9 . From the detailed TEM microstructural analysis, all the hardening increments contributing to the yield strength of the steels were computed the results showed a good agreement with the measured tensile properties.
Archive | 2011
K. Cho; Konstantin V. Redkin; M. Hua; C. I. Garcia; Anthony J. DeArdo
Dual phase steels for production on CGL, having tensile strength range from 590 to 1200 MPa, was developed in Nb-bearing Cr–Mo steels with carbon contents 0.06 and 0.15 mass%. The role of Nb in these steels, as well as the formation and transformation characteristics of austenite as a function of intercritical annealing temperature, cooling rate from intercritical annealing temperature to 460°C were investigated. The mechanical property tests of the steels treated by CGL were performed. The OIM and EBSD image quality analyses were employed in this investigation for analyzing microstructures and the phase transformation products of austenite. The results show each strength grade dual phase steel has the excellent combination of tensile strength and ductility properties. The addition of Nb can further improve the tensile strength of the Cr–Mo dual phase steel without ductility reduction. This relates to microstructure refined by the Nb in steels and the proper combination of volume fraction of recrystallized ferrite and martensite.
Isij International | 2005
Jinghui Wu; Peter J. Wray; C. I. Garcia; M. Hua; Anthony J. DeArdo
Metallurgical and Materials Transactions A-physical Metallurgy and Materials Science | 1997
M. Hua; C. I. Garcia; Anthony J. DeArdo
Isij International | 2006
Ruizhen Wang; C. I. Garcia; M. Hua; K. Cho; Hongtao Zhang; Anthony J. DeArdo