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Latin American applied research

versión impresa ISSN 0327-0793

Lat. Am. appl. res. v.32 n.3 Bahía Blanca jul./sept. 2002

 

On microstructure development and inclusion generation in a continuously cast resulphurised steel

C. Mapelli, M. Vedani and A. Zambon 

Politecnico di Milano - Dipartimento di Meccanica, Piazza L. Da Vinci 32, I-20133 Milano, Italy
 carlo.mapelli@polimi.it, maurizio.vedani@polimi.it
Università di Padova -  DIMEG, Via Marzolo 9, I-35131 Padova, Italy
zambona@ux1.unipd.it

Abstract — An experimental study on solidification structure development and on endogenous inclusion precipitation in a continuously cast resulphurised steel is presented. Results were obtained by investigating two heats of a free cutting C-Mn steel cast in billets with a diameter of 145 mm. The as cast structure was evaluated by macro- and microscopic analyses. Primary and secondary dendrite arm spacing measurement allowed to estimate the solidification time experienced by the steel in different region of the billet section. Modification of the pearlite vs. ferrite fraction was also studied as a function of distance from billet surface and thus with reference to solidification conditions. Endogenous inclusions of the type MnS and CaO-Al2O3 were analysed. Their formation was discussed as a function of the composition of the heats. Also for the inclusions resulting after steel solidification, the data suggested that the effects of local solidification condition and of segregation played a role of primary importance.

Keywords — continuous casting, resulphurised steels, dendrite arm spacing, endogenous inclusions.

I. INTRODUCTION

Over recent decades continuous casting has become a vital part of the steelmaking process due to improved yield and lower energy consumption properties. Concurrently the classical ingot route underwent a dramatic loss of interest and remains competitive only in specialized areas. Steel slabs and billets produced by continuous casting posses a significantly different structure from the products of ingot technology. A full knowledge of the factors affecting structure (e.g. columnar vs. equiaxed structure), segregation of alloying elements, defects formation and inclusion generation is of paramount importance for any further improvement required to increase productivity and quality of continuos casting plants.
A first aspect of great concern in steel products is the billet structure in terms of equiaxed vs. columnar grains. Several investigations were published on the effects of carbon content, on liquid superheat, on peritectic transformation and on solidification parameters [Irving et al., 1984]. In general terms, the tendency toward columnar or equiaxed structure depends primarily on steel composition. Compositions with intermediate C contents (from 0,10 to 0,50% C) tend to crystallise with an equiaxed central structure [Jacobi and Wünnenberg, 1997]. A large proportion of equiaxed structure is generally recognized as beneficial due to improved segregation distribution and cracking resistance. To this aim, great research effort was devoted to stirring effects and soft reduction (either of thermal or mechanical type) in plant design [Jacobi and Wünnenberg, 1997; Sivesson et al. 1998; El-Bealy and Fredriksson, 1994].
Internal quality, mainly evaluated by crack formation and centreline or intercolumnar segregations is a factor substantially governed by strand geometry and by solidification conditions. Again, a fully columnar structure is not appreciated since it increases segregation on the centreline. Amongst the factors affecting segregation is product bulging in the final stages of solidification. When ferrostatic pressure reaches high levels and the constraint imparted by the strand rolls is not adequate, billet or slab thickness can increase. Solute enriched liquid can thus flow through the centreline and solidify as central segregation even if the original structure is of equiaxed type. Similar effects are also reported to be brought about by internal solidification shrinkage that promote a flow of carbon-enriched steel in the final solidification region in the centre of the cast material [Irving et al., 1984; Jacobi and Wünnenberg, 1997; Sivesson et al. 1998; El-Bealy and Fredriksson, 1994]. To counteract this phenomenon, a gradual tapering of the roll gaps in the zone of final solidification revealed to be an effective method. A further beneficial effect of this technology is the squeezing action of the strand that may crush the tips of the dendrites of the advancing columnar grains.
Microsegregation behaviour in continuously cast steels is a concurrent aspect that roughly depends on the same variables discussed above. Evaluation of microsegregation is often performed in terms of dendrite arm spacing (DAS) which is considered as a measure of the segregation distance of crystal development during solidification. From a experimental point of view, reference is usually made to the secondary dendrite arm spacing (SDAS) as evaluated by optical microscopy techniques. In published literature SDAS was correlated for many steel grades to solidification and cooling conditions - the related variables can be the cooling rate (CR), the temperature gradient at liquidus line (G), the solid front growth rate (R) - as well as to chemical composition and secondary cooling conditions. The growth law can be described as a function of CR by a equation of the type: SDAS = c1·CRk, being c1 and k material and system constants. For practical purposes or when the heat flux conditions on solidification are not directly measured, reference is often made to SDAS as a function of the distance from product surface (chill surface). Again the data can be readily fitted by equations of the form: SDAS = c2·xn, being c2 and n materials and system constants and x the distance from surface [Weisgerber et al., 1999; Senk et al., 1999].
Manganese is a widely used alloying element in carbon steels. Its segregation tendency is also well known and of great practical interest. Senk and co-authors published a set of experimental data collected by investigating unalloyed carbon steels with carbon content ranging from 0,2 to 0,7% and produced with thicknesses from 60 mm down to 1,9 mm (from ingot casting simulating the thin slab casting process to twin roll casting were considered for this purpose) [Senk et al., 1999]. It was shown that the segregation coefficient for manganese (cmax/cmin ratio) increased from surface to centre of cast products and was also directly related to carbon content and to cooling rate.
During recent years a relatively huge research activity was also dedicated to thermochemistry and precipitation kinetics of inclusions in steels and to the interaction of the inclusions with the solidification front. To efficiently control the reactions taking place during steel refining and solidification, predictive models based on thermodynamical approaches were developed [Eriksson and Hack, 1990; Lu et al., 1994; Cicuti et al., 1997; Dyson et al., 1998; Hassall et al., 1998; Lehmann et al., 1998; Hong et al., 1995; Presern et al., 1991; Mapelli et al., 2000]. Models revealed to be an efficient tool for the evaluation of the equilibria between slag and metal and for the assessment of the precipitation of endogenous inclusions (complex oxides, sulphides, nitrides) within the liquid steel as a function of temperature and elemental activities.
The interaction of inclusions with the solidifying steel has been the subject of several papers that approached different aspects of this phenomenon. On a macroscale, the flow behaviour of the steel in the mould was modelled and the transport phenomena of the inclusions were computed in a research developed by Grimm and co-authors [Grimm et al., 1999]. Removal rate by flotation at the meniscus and entrapment in the solidified steel could thus be evaluated. It is of particular significance the ability of the model to reproduce, at least in a semiquantitative manner, the development of inclusion concentration at a specific distance from slab loose side (often known as quarterline band or quarter inclusion pile-up) and the formation of multiple inclusion bands as a consequence of irregular steel flow in the mould.
The present paper is aimed at widening the existing data and observations about solidification and inclusion formation in a resulphurised steel grade produced by continuous casting. Especially, experimental data on structure and endogenous inclusions properties were gathered and discussed in terms of product homogeneity and of inclusion distribution as a function of billet position (extrados vs. intrados).

I. MATERIALS AND EXPERIMENTAL PROCEDURES

The material investigated in the present study was a resulphurised C-Mn Al-killed steel. It is produced by scrap melting in a 98 ton E.B.T. electric arc furnace. Secondary steelmaking is carried out in a 90 ton ladle furnace. In particular, after the initial deoxidation, the standard ladle furnace treatment consists of desulphurisation with CaO and CaFe alloy and concurrent argon bubbling through nozzles positioned at the ladle bottom. Following overheating and temperature setting, the steel is resulphurised by FeS wire addition and subsequently Ca treated by CaSi injection. After refining, the steel is continuously cast in a curved four-strand machine to produce billets having a diameter of 145 mm.
Two different heats of the resulphurised steel were investigated in this study with the aim of gathering further information on repeatability of structural and inclusion distribution features. Their chemical composition is given in Table 1.

Sections of the continuously cast billets were cut transversally and longitudinally with respect to billet axis. Macrographs of the solidification structures were obtained by sulphur printing technique. Metallographic samples were then cut from the sections of the billets at specific locations and prepared for microstructural observation by grinding and polishing. After optical microscope analyses for detection of inclusion distribution, the samples were observed in a scanning electron microscope (SEM) equipped with a X-ray energy dispersive spectrometer (EDS) system. Inclusions were analysed quantitatively for their identification.
The measure of the volume fraction and of the shape of the non-metallic inclusions was performed by analysing selected areas on the section of the billets. The total number of the areas observed was 117 having a size of
0,34mm2 each. Measurements were carried out on six different directions equally spaced and crossing the geometrical centre of the billet.
Data on the chemical composition and temperature of the steel during casting were also collected. These were then used as input for a thermodynamic model aimed at predicting the type and amount of inclusions formed in the steel. Details of the model structure were published elsewhere [Mapelli et al., 2000]. The model is based on the Fe-Al-Ca-O-S equilibrium system and allows to solve the equilibrium reactions for the formation of oxides and sulphides through an iterative procedure coupled by mass balance equations. The results of the calculation were used here as a basis for discussion on the experimental results obtained.

III. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION

A. Macrostructure

The sulphur prints obtained for the transverse and longitudinal sections of the billets B1 and B2 showed a ring close to the surface, whose thickness ranged between 6 and 10 mm, where the structure appeared to be equiaxed. On the transverse section, beneath such ring, the structure appeared to radially converge to the metallurgical centre of the billet with well developed dendrites. The metallurgical axis on the longitudinal section which includes the extrados and the intrados of the billet did not coincide with the geometrical axis, and was usually shifted towards the extrados. The maximum observed shift was about 3 mm. On such section the orientation of the dendrites was heading the top of the section, in an angle interval of 7-15 degrees with the transverse direction. "V"-shaped segregation zones are visible, at inter-vals of roughly 30 millimetres, along the metallurgical axis. The central cavity along the longitudinal section was discontinuous, with metallic bridges connecting the opposite sides of the former solidification fronts, with evidence of sulphur segregation on the bridges, especially just above the cavity (see Figs. 1 and 2).

B. Microstructure

Based on the metallographic etching obtained from the sulphur print technique, quantitative metallography by the linear intercept method was carried out, aimed at the quantification of microstructural parameters such as the primary dendrite arm spacings (PDAS) and secondary dendrite arm spacings (SDAS) in the transverse section of the billets, to allow computations of the local solidification times. Such measurements were carried out also on samples obtained from the usual metallographic preparation route, and etched with the Oberhoffen reagent.
The results obtained by the latter route well fitted with those determined by the former. Of course the values of both the PDAS (λ1) and the SDAS (λ2) increased from the zone just beneath the outer ring to the centre of the billets, from values as low as about 200 µm (λ1) and 55µm (λ2), to values as high as 950 µm - 1000 µm (λ1) and 325 µm - 350 µm (λ2), respectively.

In the annular zone between 57 and 44 mm from the metallurgical centre of the transverse sections of both the heats, a significant slowdown in the rate of λ1 and λ2 increase was detected. By computing the local solidification times and according to the casting speed it could be determined that such annular area solidified at a reduced solidification rate, when the billets left the mould and before they reached the primary spray cooling zone.
The overall solidification times, needed for the solidification to develop from the surface of the billet to its center, is determined according to the model proposed by El-Bealy and Thomas [El-Bealy and Thomas, 1996] and assume the values of 465 s and 470 s for heat B1 and B2, respectively.

On the basis of metallographic etching using the Nital 3% reagent, an increase in the pearlitic area fraction was determined along the direction from the periphery of the billets towards the metallurgical centre, as shown in Figs. 3 and 4. The pearlite fraction increased from 20% to 25%, which is consistent with the well known increase in carbon content as solidification proceeds towards the metallurgical axis of the billet.

C. Inclusion distribution

The samples investigated substantially revealed the presence of two different kinds of inclusion types: calcium aluminates and manganese sulphides. Although the presence in small amounts of other elements such as magnesium and titanium was also detected, the inclusional reference system could be reasonably identified with the two above mentioned non-metallic inclusions. The average chemical compositions of the calcium aluminate and of the sulphide inclusions are reported in Tables 2 and 3. From the analyses it can be stated that the calcium aluminates belong to the forms C.2A (CaO.2Al2O3) or C.6A (CaO.6Al2O3). The presence of the MgO phase is also inferable suggesting the possible formation of the spinel (MgO.Al2O3). Considering the low oxygen content of the metal-slag system during alloying by Ca, it is supposed that the MgO oxide was originally contained in the slag or was formed due to metal-refractory lining interaction [Janke 2000].

These values of the compounds are in good agreement with the results of the model describing the inclusions precipitation within the liquid bulk [Mapelli et al., 2000] as calculated by considering the specific chemical compositions of the two steels investigated and the temperature of the liquidus temperature of 1533°C. Table 4 summarises the results obtained by model calculation for the two heats B1 and B2.

The computations performed pointed out that there is a great presence of MnS, but the amount of CaS is not enough to produce any modifications of MnS. The ratio (%Al2O3/(%CaO+%Al2O3)) is about 0,88 while the ex-perimental value is 0,84.
The experimental chemical compositions gathered in Table 2 were obtained by analysing over 120 nonmetallic inclusions. The statistical data demonstrate that there is not a significant variation of the inclusion composition over the examined section of the two billets. Both the C.2A and the C.6A compounds are solid phases during solidification of the steel, their melting temperature being in the range 2048 ÷ 2176 K [VDI, 1981]. The presence of solid calcium aluminates during casting is generally considered to be harmful since they can produce nozzle clogging.
For image analysis, the observed non-metallic inclusions were approximated by an equivalent ellipse that contains the inclusion. The calcium aluminate compounds generally featured a round shape with a ratio
between the major and minimum axis close to unity, as shown in figure 5. On the other hand, the manganese sulphides found in the billet structure generally showed a ratio greater than 2 due to their elongated shape, as shown in figure 6. As a first consideration, it is possible to suppose that these non-metallic inclusions belong to the second type of MnS, which feature an elongated shape as a consequence of the oxygen content of the melt that influences the shape and the mechanical properties of the MnS inclusions [Gonzales, 1984]. However, this is not consistent with the calcium-aluminate types found in the billets (C.2A, C.6A) for which aAl2O3 = 1, as stated by [Korousic, 1991]. At the casting temperature here used and considering the equilibrium constant: log KAl2O3 = 62780/T - 20,17, the oxygen activity cannot be so high to allow the formation of second type MnS. The above assessment therefore suggests that the shape of MnS is mainly due to their process of formation during the solidification and the related segregation of Mn and S within the dendrite arms.

The average composition of the MnS phase is reported in Table 3. It was obtained by the analysis of over 380 inclusions. During microprobe analyses it was chosen to ignore the presence of the measured Fe on inclusion composition since its contribution was supposed to be mainly due to the steel matrix surrounding the small inclusions. Again, the standard deviation suggests a fairly good homogeneity amongst the sulphides population in both the heats investigated. Traces of Ca and Ti, were also found in the manganese sulphides but it is believed that they cannot cause any important modification to the behaviour and the shape of the inclusions.
The peculiar shape of each inclusion type allowed to distinguish the population of the non-metallic compounds on the basis of their geometrical features during image analysis investigation. This approach may potentially have some drawbacks because some sulphides could have a globular form. However this case was very rare and the measurements were judged sufficiently reliable.

The total volume fraction of the manganese sulphides and calcium aluminates for the two heats investigated were thus calculated and are reported in Figs. 7 and 8. These data indicate an increase of the volume fraction of the non-metallic inclusions in particular regions, at 20-30mm from the side of the billet.

Further information on the inclusion distribution in the section of the billets are given in the graphs of Figs. 9 and 10, that point out an increase of the manganese sulphide inclusions. A series of peaks positioned at 20-30 mm from the side of the billet is clearly visible; this region roughly corresponds to the area of reduced solidification rate when the billet leaves the mould (previously defined at 57÷44 mm from the metallurgical centre).

Other secondary peaks are distributed in the inner regions featuring irregular spatial distribution presumably due to fluidodynamic effects of the liquid steel flow as affected by nozzle ports inclination, mould geometry and the possible modification of the designed metal flow as a consequence of the deposition of the nonmetallic material on the wall of the nozzle (i.e.: possible precipitation of solid calcium aluminates) [Grimm et al., 1999]. Further phenomena of possible influence can be those involving central segregation and floating effects acting together with segregation during the progress of the billet on the curved strand [Bannenberg, 1995].
The segregation crown at a distance of 20-30 mm from the outer side is probably determined by a change in the cooling rate that causes the permanence of this region in the range between the solidus and liquidus temperature for a longer time than the other regions. Although such amount of segregation does not lead to any practical concern in the steel products, it has a certain interest for a fundamental study on solidification of resulphurised steels. The features of the development of dendritism in this zone strongly reduces the diluition effects of the solute that segregates between the dendrite arms causing a significant precipitation of the observed non-metallic compounds.

IV. CONCLUSIONS

A study on structure and inclusion distribution as affected by solidification during continuous casting was undertaken on a continuously cast C-Mn resulphurised steel. From experimental analyses carried out on two heats, the following conclusions can be drawn.
- Measurement of primary and secondary dendrite arm spacing allowed to estimate the overall solidification time of the billets as about 470 s.
- An annular zone between 57 and 44 mm from the metallurgical centre of the billets featured a significant slowdown in DAS increasing rate when moving toward billet centre. This was accounted for by a reduction in solidification rate when the billets left the mould and before they reached the primary spray cooling zone.
- Inclusion analysis showed the main presence of manganese sulphides and of calcium aluminates of
the type CaO.2Al2O3 and CaO.6Al2O3. Detailed image analysis allowed to draw maps of inclusion distribution in the billet section.
- Sulphide segregation regions were detected at positions roughly corresponding to the annular zone of reduced solidification rate. Further inclusion density peaks were measured in the inner zone of the billet sections; these were supposed to be mainly related to irregular fluidodynamic effects of the liquid steel flow.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The present research was financed by the Italian Ministry of University and Scientific and Technological Research. The authors are also grateful to Dr. Eng. Giovanni Amoruso for his activity in microstructural examinations.

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Received: December 15, 2000.
Accepted for publication: Janury 15, 2002.
Recommended by Subject Editor E. Dvorkin.