The Effect of Strain Aging on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Steel for Reel-Lay Coiled Steel Pipelines.
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| Title: | The Effect of Strain Aging on the Microstructure and Mechanical Properties of Steel for Reel-Lay Coiled Steel Pipelines. |
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| Authors: | Cao, Yuxi1,2 (AUTHOR), Zuo, Guofeng2,3 (AUTHOR), Peng, Yang3 (AUTHOR), Zhu, Lin1,3 (AUTHOR), Tong, Shuai2 (AUTHOR), Yin, Shubiao1,3 (AUTHOR), Sun, Xinjun2 (AUTHOR) |
| Source: | Materials (1996-1944). Aug2025, Vol. 18 Issue 15, p3462. 17p. |
| Subjects: | Microstructure, Dislocation density, Strain hardening, Material plasticity, Mechanical behavior of materials, Steel pipe |
| Abstract: | Deep-sea oil and gas pipelines undergo significant plastic strain during reel-lay installation. Additionally, the static strain aging phenomenon that occurs during service can further deteriorate the mechanical properties of the pipelines. This study investigates the plastic deformation mechanism of reel-lay pipeline steel by subjecting the test steel to 5% pre-strain followed by aging treatment at 250 °C for 1 h. The present study systematically correlates the evolution of mechanical properties with microstructural changes through microstructural characterization techniques such as EBSD, TEM, and XRD. The results demonstrate that after pre-straining, the yield strength of the experimental steel increases due to dislocation strengthening and residual stress generation, while its uniform elongation decreases. Although no significant changes in grain size are observed macroscopically, microstructural characterization reveals a substantial increase in dislocation density within the matrix, forming dislocation cells and walls. These substructures lead to a deterioration of the material's work hardening capacity. Following aging treatment, the tested steel exhibits further increased yield strength and reduced uniform elongation. After aging treatment, although the dislocation density in the matrix slightly decreases and dislocation tangles are somewhat reduced, the Cottrell atmosphere pinning effect leads to a further decline in work hardening capability, ultimately resulting in the deterioration of plasticity in reel-lay pipeline steel. The instantaneous hardening exponent curve shows that the work hardening phenomenon becomes more pronounced in the tested steel after strain aging as the tempering temperature increases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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| Database: | Engineering Source |
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| Abstract: | Deep-sea oil and gas pipelines undergo significant plastic strain during reel-lay installation. Additionally, the static strain aging phenomenon that occurs during service can further deteriorate the mechanical properties of the pipelines. This study investigates the plastic deformation mechanism of reel-lay pipeline steel by subjecting the test steel to 5% pre-strain followed by aging treatment at 250 °C for 1 h. The present study systematically correlates the evolution of mechanical properties with microstructural changes through microstructural characterization techniques such as EBSD, TEM, and XRD. The results demonstrate that after pre-straining, the yield strength of the experimental steel increases due to dislocation strengthening and residual stress generation, while its uniform elongation decreases. Although no significant changes in grain size are observed macroscopically, microstructural characterization reveals a substantial increase in dislocation density within the matrix, forming dislocation cells and walls. These substructures lead to a deterioration of the material's work hardening capacity. Following aging treatment, the tested steel exhibits further increased yield strength and reduced uniform elongation. After aging treatment, although the dislocation density in the matrix slightly decreases and dislocation tangles are somewhat reduced, the Cottrell atmosphere pinning effect leads to a further decline in work hardening capability, ultimately resulting in the deterioration of plasticity in reel-lay pipeline steel. The instantaneous hardening exponent curve shows that the work hardening phenomenon becomes more pronounced in the tested steel after strain aging as the tempering temperature increases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |
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| ISSN: | 19961944 |
| DOI: | 10.3390/ma18153462 |