The effects of multiple austenitizing and quenching (AQ) thermal cycles on the microstructure and hardness of AISI O2 (90MnCrV8), D2 (X153CrMoV12), and D3 (X210Cr13) tool steels were systematically investigated. Up to four consecutive AQ treatments were applied to assess the influence of repeated austenitization on grain refinement, carbide dissolution, martensitic transformation, and retained austenite. The microstructure was investigated by optical and SEM observations, supported with XRD analyses. The results were correlated with Rockwell and Vickers hardness measurements. In AISI O2, the mean austenitic grain size decreased from (6.5 ± 0.8) μm to (4.3 ± 0.4) μm, accompanied by an increase in hardness from ~800 HV1 to ~950 HV1 (63 HRC), mainly due to the progressive carbide dissolution and a reduction in retained austenite. In AISI D2 and D3, repeated AQ cycles led to a marked reduction in carbide size and volume fraction (up to 25%), with D2 showing partial coarsening beyond the third cycle and D3 exhibiting continuous dissolution owing to higher carbide stability. A linear correlation between the carbide volume fraction and Rockwell hardness was established. Compared with conventional single-step treatments, the multi-cycle AQ approach also promote spheroidization of small carbides.
Effects of Multiple Quenching Treatments on Microstructure and Hardness of O2, D2, and D3 Tool Steels / Ghio, Emanuele; Felci, Matteo; Garziera, Rinaldo. - In: JOURNAL OF MANUFACTURING AND MATERIALS PROCESSING. - ISSN 2504-4494. - 9:12(2025). [10.3390/jmmp9120395]
Effects of Multiple Quenching Treatments on Microstructure and Hardness of O2, D2, and D3 Tool Steels
Ghio, Emanuele
;Garziera, Rinaldo
2025-01-01
Abstract
The effects of multiple austenitizing and quenching (AQ) thermal cycles on the microstructure and hardness of AISI O2 (90MnCrV8), D2 (X153CrMoV12), and D3 (X210Cr13) tool steels were systematically investigated. Up to four consecutive AQ treatments were applied to assess the influence of repeated austenitization on grain refinement, carbide dissolution, martensitic transformation, and retained austenite. The microstructure was investigated by optical and SEM observations, supported with XRD analyses. The results were correlated with Rockwell and Vickers hardness measurements. In AISI O2, the mean austenitic grain size decreased from (6.5 ± 0.8) μm to (4.3 ± 0.4) μm, accompanied by an increase in hardness from ~800 HV1 to ~950 HV1 (63 HRC), mainly due to the progressive carbide dissolution and a reduction in retained austenite. In AISI D2 and D3, repeated AQ cycles led to a marked reduction in carbide size and volume fraction (up to 25%), with D2 showing partial coarsening beyond the third cycle and D3 exhibiting continuous dissolution owing to higher carbide stability. A linear correlation between the carbide volume fraction and Rockwell hardness was established. Compared with conventional single-step treatments, the multi-cycle AQ approach also promote spheroidization of small carbides.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.


