Yujiao Li
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Yujiao Li.
Ultramicroscopy | 2011
Yujiao Li; Pyuck-Pa Choi; C. Borchers; Y.Z. Chen; S. Goto; Dierk Raabe; R. Kirchheim
Atom Probe Tomography (APT) was used to analyze the carbon distribution in a heavily cold drawn pearlitic steel wire with a true strain of 6.02. The carbon concentrations in cementite and ferrite were separately measured by a sub-volume method and compared with the literature data. It is found that the carbon concentration in ferrite saturates with strain. The carbon concentration in cementite decreases with the lamellar thickness, while the carbon atoms segregate at dislocations or cell/grain boundaries in ferrite. The mechanism of cementite decomposition is discussed in terms of the evolution of dislocation structure during severe plastic deformation.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Soundès Djaziri; Yujiao Li; Gholamali Ali Nematollahi; Blazej Grabowski; Shoji Goto; Christoph Kirchlechner; Aleksander Kostka; Stephen Doyle; Jörg Neugebauer; Dierk Raabe; Gerhard Dehm
Martensite steel is induced from pearlitic steel by a newly discovered method, which is completely different from the traditional route of quenching austenitic steel. Both experimental and theoretical studies demonstrate that Fe-C martensite forms by severe deformation at room temperature. The new mechanism identified here opens a paths to material-design strategies based on deformation-driven nanoscale phase transformations.
Ultramicroscopy | 2013
Yujiao Li; Pyuck-Pa Choi; Shoji Goto; C. Borchers; Dierk Raabe; R. Kirchheim
A local electrode atom probe has been employed to analyze the redistribution of alloying elements including Si, Mn, and Cr in pearlitic steel wires upon cold-drawing and subsequent annealing. It has been found that the three elements undergo mechanical mixing upon cold-drawing at large strains, where Mn and Cr exhibit a nearly homogeneous distribution throughout both ferrite and cementite, whereas Si only dissolves slightly in cementite. Annealing at elevated temperatures leads to a reversion of the mechanical alloying. Si atoms mainly segregate at well-defined ferrite (sub)grain boundaries formed during annealing. Cr and Mn are strongly concentrated in cementite adjacent to the ferrite/cementite interface due to their lower diffusivities in cementite than in ferrite.
Ultramicroscopy | 2015
Yujiao Li; Dirk Ponge; Pyuck-Pa Choi; Dierk Raabe
B-added low carbon steels exhibit excellent hardenability. The reason has been frequently attributed to B segregation at prior austenite grain boundaries, which prevents the austenite to ferrite transformation and favors the formation of martensite. The segregation behavior of B at prior austenite grain boundaries is strongly influenced by processing conditions such as austenitization temperatures and cooling rates and by alloying elements such as Mo, Cr, and Nb. Here an local electrode atom probe was employed to investigate the segregation behavior of B and other alloying elements (C, Mn, Si, and Cr) in a Cr-added Mo-free martensitic steel. Similar to our previous results on a Mo-added steel, we found that in both steels B is segregated at prior austenite grain boundaries with similar excess values, whereas B is neither detected in the martensitic matrix nor at martensite-martensite boundaries at the given cooling rate of 30K/s. These results are in agreement with the literature reporting that Cr has the same effect on hardenability of steels as Mo in the case of high cooling rates. The absence of B at martensite-martensite boundaries suggests that B segregates to prior austenite grain boundaries via a non-equilibrium mechanism. Segregation of C at all boundaries such as prior austenite grain boundaries and martensite-martensite boundaries may occur by an equilibrium mechanism.
Microscopy and Microanalysis | 2017
Zirong Peng; Baptiste Gault; Dierk Raabe; Michael W Ashton; Susan B. Sinnott; Pyuck-Pa Choi; Yujiao Li
1. Department of Microstructure Physics and Alloy Design, Max-Planck-Institut für Eisenforschung GmbH, Max-Planck-Straße 1, Düsseldorf, Germany 2. Department of Materials science and Engineering, University of Florida, Gainesville, Florida USA 3. Materials Science and Engineering, Pennsylvania State University, State College, Pennsylvania , USA 4. Department of Materials Science and Engineering, Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology (KAIST), 291 Daehak-ro, Yuseong-gu, Daejeon, Republic of Korea 5. Center for Interface-Dominated High Performance Materials, Ruhr-Universität Bochum, Bochum, Germany
Acta Materialia | 2011
Yujiao Li; Pyuck-Pa Choi; C. Borchers; S. Westerkamp; S. Goto; Dierk Raabe; R. Kirchheim
Physical Review Letters | 2014
Michael Herbig; Dierk Raabe; Yujiao Li; Pyuck-Pa Choi; Stefan Zaefferer; Shoji Goto
Current Opinion in Solid State & Materials Science | 2014
Dierk Raabe; Michael Herbig; Stefanie Sandlöbes; Yujiao Li; Darius Tytko; Margarita Kuzmina; Dirk Ponge; Pyuck-Pa Choi
Mrs Bulletin | 2010
Dierk Raabe; Pyuck-Pa Choi; Yujiao Li; Aleksander Kostka; Xavier Sauvage; F. Lecouturier; K. Hono; R. Kirchheim; Reinhard Pippan; David Embury
Acta Materialia | 2012
Yujiao Li; Pyuck-Pa Choi; S. Goto; C. Borchers; Dierk Raabe; R. Kirchheim