Everything about Martensite totally explained
Martensite, named after the German
metallurgist Adolf Martens (1850–1914), is any crystal structure that's formed by
displacive transformation, as opposed to much slower
diffusive transformations. It includes a class of hard
minerals occurring as lath- or plate-shaped
crystal grains. When viewed in cross-section, the lenticular (lens-shaped) crystal grains appear acicular (needle-shaped), which is how they're sometimes incorrectly described. "Martensite" most commonly refers to a very hard constituent of
steel (the alloy of
iron and
carbon) important in some tool steels. The martensite is formed by rapid cooling (
quenching) of
austenite which traps carbon atoms that don't have time to diffuse out of the crystal structure.
In the
1890s, Martens studied samples of different steels under a
microscope, and found that the hardest steels had a regular crystalline structure. He was the first to explain the cause of the widely differing mechanical properties of steels. Martensitic structures have since been found in many other practical materials, including
shape memory alloys and
transformation-toughened ceramics.
Martensite has a different crystalline structure (body-centered-tetragonal) than the face-centered-cubic
austenite from which it's formed, but identical chemical or alloy composition. The transition between these two structures requires very little
thermal activation energy because it occurs displacively or martensiticly by the subtle but rapid rearrangement of atomic positions, and has been known to occur even at
cryogenic temperatures. Martensite has a lower density than austenite, so that the martensitic transformation results in a relative change of volume: this can be seen vividly in the Japanese
katana, which is straight before quenching. Differential quenching causes martensite to form predominantly in the edge of the blade rather than the back; as the edge expands, the blade takes on a gently curved shape.
Martensite isn't shown in the equilibrium
phase diagram of the iron-carbon system because it's a metastable phase, the kinetic product of rapid cooling of steel containing sufficient carbon. Since chemical processes (the attainment of equilibrium)
accelerate at higher temperature, martensite is easily destroyed by the application of heat. This process is called
tempering. In some alloys, the effect is reduced by adding elements such as
tungsten that interfere with
cementite nucleation, but, more often than not, the phenomenon is exploited instead. Since quenching can be difficult to control, many steels are quenched to produce an overabundance of martensite, then tempered to gradually reduce its concentration until the right structure for the intended application is achieved. Too much martensite leaves steel
brittle, too little leaves it
soft.
Martensitic transformation: mysterious properties explained
The difference between austenite and martensite is, in some ways, quite small: while the unit cell of austenite is, on average, a perfect little cube, the transformation to martensite sees this cube distorted by interstitial carbon atoms that don't have time to diffuse out during displacive transformation, so that it's a tiny bit longer than before in one dimension and a little bit shorter in the other two. The mathematical description of the two structures is quite different, for reasons of symmetry (see external links), but the chemical bonding remains very similar. Unlike cementite, which has bonding reminiscent of ceramic materials, the hardness of martensite is difficult to explain in chemical terms.
The explanation hinges on the crystal's subtle change in dimension. Even a microscopic crystallite is millions of unit cells long. Since all of these units face the same direction, distortions of even a fraction of a percent become magnified into a major mismatch between neighboring materials. The mismatch is sorted out by the creation of a myriad of
crystal defects, in a process reminiscent of
work hardening. As in work-hardened steel, these defects prevent atoms from sliding past one another in an organized fashion, causing the material to become harder.
Shape memory alloy also has surprising mechanical properties, that were eventually explained by an analogy to martensite. Unlike the iron-carbon system, alloys in the nickel-titanium system can be chosen that make the "martensitic" phase
thermodynamically stable.
Pseudomartensitic transformation
In addition to displacive transformation and diffusive transformation, a new phase transformation that involves displasive sublattice transition and atomic diffusion was discovered by Chen et. al. using modern diffraction technique. The new transformation mechanism has been christened by the scientists Pseudomartensitic transformation.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Martensite'.
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