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Dendrite Micro

The researchers observed the process of re-austenitization and bainite formation in a medium carbon steel using an in-situ SEM microscope. This allowed them to directly observe phase region growth and impingement during heating and cooling. The results have improved models of phase transformations which can link microstructures to material properties. An example video from the study shows the transformations but more details are in the published article.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
32 views4 pages

Dendrite Micro

The researchers observed the process of re-austenitization and bainite formation in a medium carbon steel using an in-situ SEM microscope. This allowed them to directly observe phase region growth and impingement during heating and cooling. The results have improved models of phase transformations which can link microstructures to material properties. An example video from the study shows the transformations but more details are in the published article.

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Quekch
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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4/30/23, 1:23 PM Post | Feed | LinkedIn

xciting new research published in Materials & Design! Our team (in collaboration with
ICSM, France) implemented a novel in-situ SEM microscope to directly observe re-
austenitization during heating and bainite formation during subsequent cooling and
isothermal holding in a medium carbon steel. This method allowed for the direct
observation of phase region growth and impingement, providing important insights
into phase transformation dynamics. The results have been used to improve current
phase transformation models which can be used to link resulting phase morphologies
to material mechanical properties. Read more about our findings in the article linked
below. An example of a recorded video can be seen here, but more could be found in
the article supplementary data #Bainite #In_Situ_SEM #CA_Model
Oskari Seppälä
Aarne Pohjonen
Jari Larkiola
Renaud PODOR
https://lnkd.in/dJc3g38k

0:08
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Paul Cheng  2nd 12h


https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7057981635253739520/ 1/4
4/30/23, 1:23 PM Post | Feed | LinkedIn

Inventor / Founder at
FuseRing.com

Really cool video. I watched it at least 10 times.


Those black dots (large and small), are those voids? It seems they never heal
nor move/ Size and location doesn't seem to change?
I understand grain boundaries and interXln stress is redistributed. And that
there's no new material to reshuffle to fill the voids. …see more

Like Reply 2 Replies

Vahid Javaheri Author 12h


Research group leader (microstructure and
mechanisms), University of Oulu. Docent (Adj.
Professor), University of Turku

Thanks, we have not investigated their nature. We just used them as a


reference point to find the same investigated area during ex-situ EBSD :)
We have simply assumed thet they are either dust or intermetallic
inclusions.

Like Reply

Paul Cheng  2nd 12h


Inventor / Founder at
FuseRing.com

I'm not a metallurgist, just an observer.


I hope I never see that type of 'dust' in my household. It'll break the
vacuum cleaner.

Like Reply

Sakine Ülker  3rd+ 15h


Malzeme ve
Metalurji Mühendisi

Great 👏 exited to see martensitic transformation video

Like 1 Reply 1 Reply

Vahid Javaheri Author 11h


Research group leader (microstructure and
mechanisms), University of Oulu. Docent (Adj.
Professor), University of Turku

Unfortunately, still reaching the critical cooling rates to get martensitic


transformation is quite challenging 😮‍💨

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7057981635253739520/ 2/4
4/30/23, 1:23 PM Post | Feed | LinkedIn

Like 1 Reply

Ercan Balikci  3rd+ 16h


Strategy, roadmap, and portfolio creation
targeting production; materials science, additive
manufacturing, alloy design, materials selection
for design, crystal growth

This is great.
A high speed camera can provide a lot more detail.

Like 1 Reply 3 Replies

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Julio Neves  3rd+ 10h


Professor na Universidade Tecnológica
Federal do Paraná (UTFPR)

Hi, Ercan Balikci, you are right. Indeed it is possible for 1kX.
Thanks for the insight!

Like 1 Reply

David Tarnowski (He/Him) 3rd+ 7h


System Design Engineer (Audio) |
Simulation | Finite Element Analysis

Thanks for posting this illustrative video. I would be very interested in seeing
additional images between 3:10:22 at 825 °C to 3:11:17 at 492 °C. The
transition appears to be extremely quick in the post. Thanks again!

Like 1 Reply

Sabine Friederichs  2nd 17h


When nothing goes
right, go left!

That's awesome 👌🏽

Like 2 Reply

Nacho Bautista Dominguez  3rd+ 7m


CEO Traterva.S,L

Simplemente maravilloso ! Gracias !!


See translation

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4/30/23, 1:23 PM Post | Feed | LinkedIn

Kees Moison  3rd+ 11h


owner KeMo
PC Special

That’s what I missed the last 40 years!

Like 1 Reply

Magnus Boåsen  3rd+ 14h


Working with solid mechanics
at Uddeholms AB

Amanda Forsberg

Like Reply

Fanny RIALLANT  3rd+ 17h


Chef de projet
R&D/Expert matériaux

mickael lemoine, Pascal Dainelli


Un peu de science ?
See translation

Like Reply

Jaisimha Manipatruni  3rd+ 13h


Nano-electronics |Energy
Materials |Materials Science|

Amazing work , wondering how recovery and recrystallisation would look


under in-situ SEM

Like 1 Reply
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