Alloy influence on the properties of tempered steels for casing pipes

D. P. Uskov, I. Yu. Pyshmintsev, A. N. Maltseva, M. A. Smirnov, Yu. N. Goykhenberg, E. A. Tarasova

Abstract


The effect of alloying on the properties of high-tempered steels used for production of casing pipes is studied. The steels contained 0.25 %C, 0.9 %C and different amounts of Mo, V and Nb. It is shown that an increase in the molybdenum content from 0.15 to 0.53 % provides a noticeable increase in the mechanical characteristics of chromium-molybdenum steels after tempering at 600–690 °C. Vanadium and niobium addition (about 0.03 %) results in a further increase of strength properties. The highest hardening of steel with 0.32 % molybdenum in tempered state is provided by complex alloying with niobium and vanadium, which results in the same strength as that of 0.53 % Mo steel without additional alloying. V-notch impact toughness at –60 °C for all steels tempered at 660–690 °C is sufficiently high (150–280 J/cm2). The same is true for tempering at 600 °C with the exception of the vanadium-niobium steel.


Keywords


high-tempered steel; mechanical properties; toughness; carbides; P110; Q125



DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14529/met170205

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