Carlos Luis Llorente
National University of La Plata
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Publication
Featured researches published by Carlos Luis Llorente.
Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance | 2000
Pablo David Bilmes; Carlos Luis Llorente; J.E. Perez Ipiña
The microstructures and tensile, Charpy, and crack tip opening displacement (CTOD) properties of 13Cr4NiMo soft martensitic stainless steel flux cored are welding process (FCAW) weld metals have been studied through different applied postweld heat treatments (PWHT). Phases and microstructural characteristics have been analyzed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and x-ray diffraction. The effect of the tempering and double tempering, with and without previous solution annealing, on the impact and fracture toughness has been studied. The role of the retained austenite resulting from tempering has been recognized, and it is suggested that the austenite particles improve the toughness of the welds through their transformation by the transformation-induced plasticity (TRIP) mechanism.
Micron | 2012
Kyung-Won Kang; M.D. Pereda; M.E. Canafoglia; Pablo David Bilmes; Carlos Luis Llorente; R. Bonetto
Pitting corrosion is a damage mechanism quite serious and dangerous in both carbon steel boiler tubes for power plants which are vital to most industries and stainless steels for orthopedic human implants whose demand, due to the increase of life expectation and rate of traffic accidents, has sharply increased. Reliable methods to characterize this kind of damage are becoming increasingly necessary, when trying to evaluate the advance of damage and to establish the best procedures for component inspection in order to determine remaining lives and failure mitigation. A study about the uncertainties on the topographies of corrosion pits from 3D SEM images, obtained at low magnifications (where errors are greater) and different stage tilt angles were carried out using an in-house software previously developed. Additionally, measurements of pit depths on biomaterial surfaces, subjected to two different surface treatments on stainless steels, were carried out. The different depth distributions observed were in agreement with electrochemical measurements.
Materials Research-ibero-american Journal of Materials | 2000
C. Berejnoi; J. Perez Ipiña; Carlos Luis Llorente
The pop-in phenomenon, quite common in fracture mechanics tests of welded joints, corresponds to a brittle crack initiation grown from a local brittle zone (LBZ) that is arrested in reaching the higher toughness material that surrounds this LBZ. A methodology to obtain a high percentage of pop-in occurrence in laboratory testing is necessary to study the pop-in significance. Such a method is introduced in this work and includes the consumable combination and welding procedures for the SMAW welding process to generate artificial LBZ. In order to find out the influence of the loading state upon the pop-in phenomenon, laboratory CTOD tests were performed using two specimen configurations: some single edge-notched specimens were loaded on a three-point bending (SE(B)) fixture while others were tested in tensile load (SE(T)). A higher frequency of pop-in occurrence was observed in the SE(B) geometry.
Journal of Materials Engineering and Performance | 2015
Adriana Lucila Lemos Barboza; Kyung Won Kang; Rita Dominga Bonetto; Carlos Luis Llorente; Pablo David Bilmes; C.A. Gervasi
Due to the combination of good biofunctionality and biocompatibility at low cost, AISI 316 low carbon vacuum melting (LVM) stainless steel, as considered in ASTM F139 standard, is often the first choice for medical implants, particularly for use in orthopedic surgery. Proper surface finish must be provided to ensure adequate interactions of the alloy with human body tissues that in turn allows the material to deliver the desired performance. Preliminary studies performed in our laboratory on AISI 316LVM stainless steel surfaces modified by glass bead blasting (from industrial supplier) followed by different nitric acid passivation conditions disclosed the necessity to extend parameters of the surface treatments and to further consider roughness, pitting corrosion resistance, and surface and subsurface hardening measurements, all in one, as the most effective characterization strategy. This was the approach adopted in the present work. Roughness assessment was performed by means of amplitude parameters, functional parameters, and an estimator of the fractal dimension that characterizes surface topography. We clearly demonstrate that the blasting treatment should be carried out under controlled conditions in order to obtain similar surface and subsurface properties. Otherwise, a variation in one of the parameters could modify the surface properties, exerting a profound impact on its application as biomaterial. A passivation step is necessary to offset the detrimental effect of blasting on pitting corrosion resistance.
Corrosion Science | 2006
Pablo David Bilmes; Carlos Luis Llorente; L. Saire Huamán; L.M. Gassa; C.A. Gervasi
Corrosion Science | 2004
C. Gesnouin; A. Hazarabedian; P. Bruzzoni; J. Ovejero-Garcı́a; Pablo David Bilmes; Carlos Luis Llorente
Corrosion Science | 2009
Pablo David Bilmes; Carlos Luis Llorente; Claudia Marcela Méndez; C.A. Gervasi
Corrosion Science | 2011
M.D. Pereda; C.A. Gervasi; Carlos Luis Llorente; Pablo David Bilmes
Materials Chemistry and Physics | 2011
C.A. Gervasi; Claudia Marcela Méndez; Pablo David Bilmes; Carlos Luis Llorente
Procedia Materials Science | 2012
M.D. Pereda; Kyung-Won Kang; R. Bonetto; Carlos Luis Llorente; Pablo David Bilmes; C.A. Gervasi