Abstract
The high solidification cracking susceptibility of low C steel weld metals was investigated using pure Fe model alloys containing 0–0·23%C, 0–5%Ni and 0–0·0144%B. In addition, a few Fe–C–Ni ternary alloys were also tested. Solidification cracking susceptibility was tested using longitudinal varestraint and transvarestraint tests. Cracking was evaluated using crack length and brittleness temperature range criteria. The Fe–C alloys showed high cracking tendency in two regimes, the first in the ultralow carbon range of 0·03–0·05%C and the second in a narrow band close to 0·1%C. The cracking was much more than that attributable to solute segregation. In Fe–Ni and Fe–B alloys, cracking was a function of alloy content. Solidification cracking due to C and Ni was higher in the ferritic mode of solidification compared to the austenitic, unlike in stainless steels, where the ferritic mode provides high resistance to cracking. In Fe-C-Ni ternary alloys, cracking could be better related to composition in terms of a variable coefficient for C in the Ni equivalent. In the vicinity of 0·1%C, cracking was attributable to shrinkage due to solid state transformation from δ to γ in the brittle temperature range, and is similar to that occurring during continuous casting of steel. However, this factor did not appear to play a role in cracking in the ultralow C range of 0·03–0·05%C.
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