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Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

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Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics. / Xu, W.; Del Castillo, P. E.J.Rivera Díaz; Van Der Zwaag, S.
2008. 1167-1181 Paper presented at International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Xu, W, Del Castillo, PEJRD & Van Der Zwaag, S 2008, 'Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics', Paper presented at International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008, Buenos Aires, Argentina, 26/05/08 - 28/05/08 pp. 1167-1181.

APA

Xu, W., Del Castillo, P. E. J. R. D., & Van Der Zwaag, S. (2008). Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics. 1167-1181. Paper presented at International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Vancouver

Xu W, Del Castillo PEJRD, Van Der Zwaag S. Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics. 2008. Paper presented at International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008, Buenos Aires, Argentina.

Author

Xu, W. ; Del Castillo, P. E.J.Rivera Díaz ; Van Der Zwaag, S. / Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics. Paper presented at International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008, Buenos Aires, Argentina.15 p.

Bibtex

@conference{c9bc7810161f4012a04e736166d5837d,
title = "Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics",
abstract = "A computational approach to design a new grade of precipitation hardened Ultra-High Strength (UHS) stainless steel is presented wherein genetic approaches are combined with thermodynamic computations. The composition scenarios are designed and optimized in order to obtain higher yield strength than the existing commercial counterparts by promoting the formation of desirable microstructures and suppressing the undesirable ones. The strength target is approached by forming a fine lath martensitic matrix and optimizing the number of nanoprecipitates (MX carbide, NiAl, Ni3Ti and Cu) particles based on thermokinetic theories. Corrosion resistance is accounted for by ensuring a minimum Cr content of 12 wt% in the matrix as precipitation has taken place. Four alloys are computationally designed which are strengthened by either MC carbides, Cu particles, Ni rich intermetallics, or a combination of all of them, considering 13 alloying elements (Al, C, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Mo, N, Nb, Ni, Si, Ti, V). The composition optimization is performed by allowing each element to potentially take 32 compositions in the given ranges which leads to a solution space containing 1020 options. The enormous computational effort is drastically reduced by applying the genetic optimization algorithm. The results of the analysis are compared to other computationally more expensive approaches (combinatorial and iterative optimization algorithms) obtaining similar results. The model predictions are also compared to a variety of existing commercial high-end engineering steels, showing that the design strategy presented here may potentially lead to significant improvements in strength.",
keywords = "Alloy design, Genetic algorithm, Maraging, Precipitate strengthening steels, Stainless, Thermodynamics, Ultra high strength",
author = "W. Xu and {Del Castillo}, {P. E.J.Rivera D{\'i}az} and {Van Der Zwaag}, S.",
year = "2008",
month = dec,
day = "1",
language = "English",
pages = "1167--1181",
note = "International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008 ; Conference date: 26-05-2008 Through 28-05-2008",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Computational design of UHS stainless steel strengthened by multi-species nanoprecipitates combining genetic algorithms and thermokinetics

AU - Xu, W.

AU - Del Castillo, P. E.J.Rivera Díaz

AU - Van Der Zwaag, S.

PY - 2008/12/1

Y1 - 2008/12/1

N2 - A computational approach to design a new grade of precipitation hardened Ultra-High Strength (UHS) stainless steel is presented wherein genetic approaches are combined with thermodynamic computations. The composition scenarios are designed and optimized in order to obtain higher yield strength than the existing commercial counterparts by promoting the formation of desirable microstructures and suppressing the undesirable ones. The strength target is approached by forming a fine lath martensitic matrix and optimizing the number of nanoprecipitates (MX carbide, NiAl, Ni3Ti and Cu) particles based on thermokinetic theories. Corrosion resistance is accounted for by ensuring a minimum Cr content of 12 wt% in the matrix as precipitation has taken place. Four alloys are computationally designed which are strengthened by either MC carbides, Cu particles, Ni rich intermetallics, or a combination of all of them, considering 13 alloying elements (Al, C, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Mo, N, Nb, Ni, Si, Ti, V). The composition optimization is performed by allowing each element to potentially take 32 compositions in the given ranges which leads to a solution space containing 1020 options. The enormous computational effort is drastically reduced by applying the genetic optimization algorithm. The results of the analysis are compared to other computationally more expensive approaches (combinatorial and iterative optimization algorithms) obtaining similar results. The model predictions are also compared to a variety of existing commercial high-end engineering steels, showing that the design strategy presented here may potentially lead to significant improvements in strength.

AB - A computational approach to design a new grade of precipitation hardened Ultra-High Strength (UHS) stainless steel is presented wherein genetic approaches are combined with thermodynamic computations. The composition scenarios are designed and optimized in order to obtain higher yield strength than the existing commercial counterparts by promoting the formation of desirable microstructures and suppressing the undesirable ones. The strength target is approached by forming a fine lath martensitic matrix and optimizing the number of nanoprecipitates (MX carbide, NiAl, Ni3Ti and Cu) particles based on thermokinetic theories. Corrosion resistance is accounted for by ensuring a minimum Cr content of 12 wt% in the matrix as precipitation has taken place. Four alloys are computationally designed which are strengthened by either MC carbides, Cu particles, Ni rich intermetallics, or a combination of all of them, considering 13 alloying elements (Al, C, Co, Cr, Cu, Mn, Mo, N, Nb, Ni, Si, Ti, V). The composition optimization is performed by allowing each element to potentially take 32 compositions in the given ranges which leads to a solution space containing 1020 options. The enormous computational effort is drastically reduced by applying the genetic optimization algorithm. The results of the analysis are compared to other computationally more expensive approaches (combinatorial and iterative optimization algorithms) obtaining similar results. The model predictions are also compared to a variety of existing commercial high-end engineering steels, showing that the design strategy presented here may potentially lead to significant improvements in strength.

KW - Alloy design

KW - Genetic algorithm

KW - Maraging

KW - Precipitate strengthening steels

KW - Stainless

KW - Thermodynamics

KW - Ultra high strength

M3 - Conference paper

AN - SCOPUS:62949173669

SP - 1167

EP - 1181

T2 - International Conference on New Developments on Metallurgy and Applications of High Strength Steels, Buenos Aires 2008

Y2 - 26 May 2008 through 28 May 2008

ER -