Acicular Ferrite — Nucleation at Inclusions and Toughness in Weld Metal

Acicular ferrite is the weld metal microstructure most strongly associated with high Charpy CVN toughness in structural steels. Unlike ferrite morphologies that nucleate at prior austenite grain boundaries, acicular ferrite initiates intragranularly on non-metallic oxide inclusions, producing a fine, randomly-interlocked needle structure that deflects propagating cleavage cracks at every boundary. This article examines the nucleation mechanism, the role of inclusion chemistry and size, the effect of weld thermal cycle on the acicular ferrite transformation window, and the quantitative link between acicular ferrite volume fraction and impact energy at sub-zero temperatures.

Key Takeaways

  • Acicular ferrite nucleates intragranularly on non-metallic inclusions (principally TiO-based oxides, 0.2–2.0 μm) rather than at prior austenite grain boundaries.
  • The interlocking needle morphology creates an effective grain size of 5–20 μm, far smaller than the prior austenite grain, maximising resistance to cleavage crack propagation.
  • Optimum acicular ferrite volume fraction is 50–70% in C–Mn weld metal, achieved by controlling heat input (1.0–2.5 kJ/mm) and consumable chemistry (Ti, B, Mn).
  • Aluminium must be kept below ~0.005 wt% in the weld deposit to avoid scavenging oxygen and forming Al₂O₃ inclusions that are poor nucleants.
  • Well-optimised acicular ferrite weld metal achieves Charpy CVN energies of 120–200 J at −40°C and ductile-to-brittle transition temperatures below −60°C.
  • Acicular ferrite and bainite share a sub-eutectoid shear mechanism but differ critically in nucleation site, morphology, and resulting toughness characteristics.
Weld Metal Microstructure: Ferrite Morphology Distribution Prior austenite grain GBF WF laths Acicular Ferrite (AF) Bainite sheaf Bainite sheaf Grain-boundary Bainite Inclusion (TiO / MnS) Acicular Ferrite lath Widmanstätten Ferrite GBF Allotriomorphic Bainite
Fig. 1 — Schematic weld metal microstructure showing the four competing ferrite morphologies within prior austenite grains. Acicular ferrite (green laths, left grain) nucleates intragranularly from oxide/sulfide inclusions (purple circles) and grows in multiple directions, whereas bainite (red, right grain) nucleates at the grain boundary and grows as aligned sheaves. Grain-boundary allotriomorphic ferrite (GBF, amber) and Widmanstätten ferrite (WF, orange) nucleate at the grain boundary and do not provide the same crack-deflection benefit. © metallurgyzone.com

What Is Acicular Ferrite?

Acicular ferrite (AF) is a ferrite morphology that forms within the interior of prior austenite grains during cooling of low-alloy steel weld metal, nucleating heterogeneously on non-metallic inclusions. The term “acicular” derives from the Latin acicula (needle), reflecting the high aspect ratio of individual laths, typically 4:1 to 10:1 in two-dimensional section. In three dimensions, each lath is a thin, elongated plate. Because laths nucleate from many independent inclusion sites and grow in all crystallographically permitted directions, the final microstructure is a randomly-interlocked mesh of ferrite needles with no preferred alignment — a crucial structural feature for toughness.

Acicular ferrite was first clearly distinguished from Widmanstätten ferrite and bainite by Cochrane and Kirkwood in 1978 and was subsequently studied extensively by Bhadeshia and co-workers at Cambridge. It is now the target microstructure for structural weld metal in offshore platforms, Arctic pipelines, LNG containment systems, and nuclear pressure vessels, where sub-zero Charpy CVN requirements must be met without post-weld heat treatment.

Formation Mechanism and Thermodynamics

Acicular ferrite forms by a displacive (shear-dominated) transformation mechanism analogous to bainite. The austenite-to-ferrite transformation is thermodynamically driven by the reduction in Gibbs free energy below the equilibrium Ae3 temperature. The transformation driving force is:

Transformation driving force:  ΔG = G_ferrite − G_austenite < 0

Approximate Ae3 (carbon steel):
Ae3 (°C) ≈ 912 − 203√[C] − 15.2[Ni] + 44.7[Si] + 31.5[Mo]
           − 30[Mn] + 11[Cr] + 20[Cu] − 700[P] − 400[Al]

Bainite start (Bs) temperature:
Bs (°C) = 830 − 270[C] − 90[Mn] − 37[Ni] − 70[Cr] − 83[Mo]
(Steven and Haynes, 1956 — wt% compositions)

Acicular ferrite forms in the temperature range: ~550–700°C
(approximately coincident with the upper bainite transformation range)

The transformation kinetics follow an Avrami (JMAK) model under isothermal conditions:

f = 1 − exp(−ktn) [isothermal transformation, fraction transformed f] where k = rate constant (composition-dependent), n = Avrami exponent ≈ 2–4

Under the continuous cooling conditions of welding, the fraction of acicular ferrite formed depends on the rate at which the weld cools through the transformation window. Diffusion of carbon (and to a lesser extent manganese) away from the growing ferrite lath controls the growth rate, following Arrhenius kinetics:

D = D₀ × exp(−Q/RT) D₀ ≈ 0.2 cm²/s (carbon in austenite), Q ≈ 142 kJ/mol

Why Inclusions Are Necessary

In high-purity weld metal (very low oxygen, no inclusions), acicular ferrite cannot form — the transformation proceeds exclusively at grain boundaries, producing coarse allotriomorphic ferrite and Widmanstätten ferrite with inferior toughness. Non-metallic inclusions provide heterogeneous nucleation sites that reduce the activation energy barrier for ferrite nucleus formation. The activation energy for heterogeneous nucleation on an inclusion surface is:

ΔG*_hetero = ΔG*_homo × f(θ) f(θ) = (2 + cosθ)(1 − cosθ)²/4 [wetting angle factor, 0 < f(θ) < 1] θ = contact angle between ferrite nucleus and inclusion surface For effective nucleation: θ should be small (<90°), i.e. low interfacial energy between ferrite and the inclusion surface.

Inclusions that satisfy this condition — principally TiO and Ti₂O₃ with a body-centred-cubic structure having a lattice parameter close to that of ferrite (α-Fe, a = 0.2866 nm) — are therefore the most potent nucleants. The disregistry (misfit) between TiO (a = 0.2953 nm) and ferrite is approximately 3%, sufficient for an epitaxial ledge mechanism to operate with low interface strain energy.

Nucleation at Inclusion Surfaces: The Ledge Mechanism

High-resolution TEM studies have revealed that acicular ferrite laths initiate at atomic ledges on the inclusion surface, where the crystallographic match between the inclusion face and the ferrite embryo is closest. The Kurdjumov-Sachs (K-S) orientation relationship describes the angular relationship between the ferrite lath and the parent austenite:

Kurdjumov-Sachs (K-S): {111}γ ∥ {110}α and <110>γ ∥ <111>α Produces 24 possible orientation variants per prior austenite grain Nishiyama-Wassermann (N-W) (alternative, common in bainite): {111}γ ∥ {110}α and <112>γ ∥ <110>α Produces 12 orientation variants

The multiplicity of variants (up to 24 per prior austenite grain for K-S) means that ferrite laths emanating from a single inclusion grow in many crystallographically distinct directions. When laths from different inclusions impinge, they do so at high misorientation angles, creating a network of high-angle boundaries that is the structural basis of acicular ferrite’s superior toughness.

Inclusion Chemistry and Size Requirements

The effectiveness of a non-metallic inclusion as an acicular ferrite nucleant depends on three factors: size, chemistry, and thermodynamic stability at the weld thermal cycle peak temperature.

Inclusion Type Optimal Size (μm) Relative AF Potency Mechanism Notes
TiO / Ti₂O₃ 0.3–1.5 Very High Lattice match + epitaxy Target for high-toughness consumables
Al₂O₃ + TiO (complex) 0.5–2.0 High TiO rim on Al₂O₃ core Ti-rich shell provides nucleation surface
MnO–SiO₂ (Mn silicate) 0.5–2.0 Moderate Thermal expansion mismatch stress Common in non-Ti consumables
MnS (alone) 0.5–3.0 Low–Moderate MnS/ferrite misfit Enhanced when co-located with oxide core
Al₂O₃ (pure) 0.2–1.5 Low Poor crystallographic match Avoid high Al in weld deposit
>3 μm inclusions (any) Negative Void nucleation in impact Reduces CVN toughness
Inclusion size window: Inclusions smaller than ~0.2 μm do not develop sufficient contact area to support stable ferrite embryos. Those larger than ~3 μm reduce toughness at high impact energies by acting as void nucleation sites under the triaxial stress state ahead of the notch. The 0.3–2.0 μm size window is therefore critical to both nucleation efficacy and final toughness.

Consumable Chemistry for Maximum Acicular Ferrite

The weld metal chemistry required to maximise acicular ferrite content has been established through systematic studies on C–Mn and HSLA steel consumables. The following target ranges apply to SMAW, GMAW, and FCAW deposits on structural steels with heat inputs of 1.0–2.5 kJ/mm:

Element Target Range (wt%) Function Effect if Exceeded
Carbon (C) 0.04–0.10 Solid solution, hardenability >0.10%: promotes martensite, reduces toughness
Manganese (Mn) 1.3–1.7 Retards GBF, increases hardenability >1.8%: may promote upper bainite
Silicon (Si) 0.3–0.5 Deoxidation, inclusion modification >0.6%: may form coarse silicate inclusions
Titanium (Ti) 0.005–0.015 (deposit) Forms TiO nucleants >0.025%: TiC precipitation may embrittle
Boron (B) 0.001–0.003 Segregates to GBs, suppresses allotriomorphic ferrite >0.004%: Fe₂B embrittlement risk
Nickel (Ni) 0.5–2.0 Toughness, does not close AF window Expensive; generally beneficial up to 3%
Aluminium (Al) <0.005 Deoxidant — must be minimised in deposit >0.005%: Al₂O₃ displaces TiO, suppresses AF

The combination of titanium (to generate TiO nucleant inclusions) and boron (to suppress grain-boundary nucleation and redirect the transformation to inclusion sites) is the basis of the modern Ti–B consumable family, which produces weld metal with 60–75% acicular ferrite across a wide heat input range. These consumables are widely used for offshore structural steels (EN 10225 S420G1+Q, S460G2+Q), Arctic linepipe (API 5L X65–X80 PSL2), and LNG storage tank plates (9% Ni steel welding).

Effect of Welding Parameters on Acicular Ferrite Content

Heat Input and Cooling Rate

The t₅₅ cooling time (time to cool from 800°C to 500°C in the HAZ and weld metal) directly controls which transformation products form. For a given steel and consumable chemistry, the following approximate relationships apply in multi-run SMAW and FCAW on structural plates:

Heat Input (kJ/mm) t₅₅ (s, 25 mm plate) Dominant Microstructure Typical CVN at −40°C (J)
<0.5 <5 Martensite / lower bainite 40–80 (brittle if untempered)
0.5–1.0 5–15 Mixed bainite + AF 80–140
1.0–2.5 15–50 Predominantly AF (50–70%) 120–200
2.5–3.5 50–90 AF + Widmanstätten + GBF 80–140
>3.5 >90 Coarse GBF + polygonal ferrite 40–80
Interpass temperature control: In multi-run welds, high interpass temperature (e.g., >250°C) raises the effective preheat and slows cooling, simulating a higher heat input. On HSLA steels with Ti–B consumables, maintaining interpass temperature ≤200°C is important to preserve the AF transformation window and avoid the GBF-dominant upper range.

Shielding Gas and Oxygen Activity

In GMAW and FCAW processes, shielding gas composition directly controls the oxygen partial pressure and hence the weld pool oxygen activity, which determines the total inclusion population and chemistry. 100% CO₂ shielding produces high oxygen activity (~600–800 ppm O in deposit), favouring many fine inclusions. Mixed Ar+CO₂ (75/25) reduces oxygen to ~300–500 ppm O, giving a slightly lower inclusion density but better bead morphology. Pure argon with oxidising flux additions (FCAW-S) can also achieve the target oxygen range of 200–400 ppm O required for optimum inclusion number density.

The relationship between HAZ microstructure and weld pool oxygen is also important: oxygen scavenging at the fusion boundary can modify the inclusion population in the first few micrometres of the HAZ, though the bulk HAZ oxygen level remains close to that of the base plate (<50 ppm O).

Temperature (°C) log Time (s) 900 800 700 600 500 400 300 1 10 100 1000 10000 Ae3 GBF start WF start Acicular Ferrite window (~600–680°C, t₅₅ = 15–60 s) Bs (Bainite start) Ms Martensite CC1: Fast HI <0.5 kJ/mm CC2: Optimum HI 1.0–2.5 kJ/mm CC3: Slow HI >3.5 kJ/mm CCT Diagram — C–Mn Weld Metal (Schematic)
Fig. 2 — Schematic continuous cooling transformation (CCT) diagram for C–Mn weld metal showing transformation start curves for GBF (grain-boundary allotriomorphic ferrite), Widmanstätten ferrite (WF), acicular ferrite (shaded window), bainite start (Bs), and the martensite start temperature (Ms). Three cooling curves illustrate the heat-input ranges: CC1 (fast, <0.5 kJ/mm) produces martensite; CC2 (optimum, 1–2.5 kJ/mm) passes through the acicular ferrite window; CC3 (slow, >3.5 kJ/mm) produces coarse GBF. © metallurgyzone.com

Crystallographic Features and Effective Grain Size

The toughness advantage of acicular ferrite originates directly from its crystallographic characteristics. Because laths nucleate from many independent inclusion sites and adopt multiple orientation variants of the K-S or N-W relationship with the parent austenite, adjacent laths frequently meet at high-angle boundaries (misorientation >15°). These high-angle boundaries are effective barriers to both slip transfer (yielding) and cleavage crack propagation.

The effective grain size for cleavage fracture in acicular ferrite is the mean free path of a propagating crack before it encounters a boundary of sufficient misorientation to require a change in crack plane. This is typically 5–20 μm in well-optimised weld metal, compared with 50–200 μm for the prior austenite grain size. By the Petch relationship for cleavage, reducing effective grain size d shifts the ductile-to-brittle transition temperature (DBTT):

Cleavage fracture stress: σ₁ = σᵢ + k₁ · d−½ (Hall-Petch form) DBTT shift (approximate): ΔT_DBTT ≈ −C · Δ(d−½) where C ≈ 10–15 K for each unit increase in d−½ (mm−½) Reducing d from 50 μm (GBF) to 10 μm (AF): d−½ increases by ~3.2 mm−½ ⇒ DBTT shift ≈ −32 to −48 °C

This quantitative relationship explains why the shift from a GBF-dominated microstructure to an AF-dominated one can move the CVN transition temperature by 40–60°C to lower values — a critical margin for offshore and Arctic structural applications. For further background on grain boundary types, energy, and their role in mechanical properties, the foundational guide on this site provides essential context.

Comparison with Related Ferrite Morphologies

Property Acicular Ferrite Bainite (upper) WF (Widmanstätten) GBF (allotriomorphic)
Nucleation site Inclusions (intragranular) Prior γ grain boundary Prior γ grain boundary Prior γ grain boundary
Growth direction Multi-directional (random) Aligned sheaves inward Plates toward grain centre Along boundary
Transformation mechanism Displacive (shear) Displacive (shear) Mixed/displacive Reconstructive (diffusion)
Effective grain size (μm) 5–20 10–30 20–60 50–200
Charpy CVN at −40°C (J, typical) 120–200 80–160 40–80 20–60
Carbon in ferrite Low (C rejected to retained austenite / carbides) Low Low Very low (full C rejection)
Associated carbon phase Retained austenite / thin films Carbide films or M-A Pearlite patches Pearlite islands / GBC
Favoured by Ti–B consumables, 1–2.5 kJ/mm HI Higher Mn, Mo; fast cooling Coarse austenite, moderate cooling Slow cooling, low hardenability

The relationship between acicular ferrite and bainite microstructure has been debated in the literature. Bhadeshia argues that acicular ferrite is mechanistically identical to bainite but with intragranular nucleation; others maintain that the lower transformation temperature and finer microstructure of some AF morphologies place it in a distinct category. For engineering purposes, the distinction is best drawn by morphology and nucleation site, as above.

Industrial Applications and Code Requirements

Offshore Structural Steel Welding

EN 10225 S355G10+M, S420G1+Q, and S460G2+Q plates for offshore platforms require Charpy CVN energies of 27–50 J at −40°C to −60°C in the weld metal and HAZ (per NORSOK M-120 and DNV-ST-B101). Acicular ferrite weld metal produced with Ti–B consumables routinely exceeds these requirements by factors of 2–4×, providing the safety margin needed for structural joints operating in the North Sea and Barents Sea. The hydrogen-induced cracking risk must also be managed in these welds through preheat control and low-hydrogen consumable classification.

Arctic Pipeline Welding (API 5L X65–X80 PSL2)

CSA Z245.1 Grade 690 and DNV-ST-F101 Y65–Y80 linepipe require Charpy CVN ≥ 40–80 J at −45°C to −60°C (full-size specimens) in weld metal. These values are achievable only with acicular ferrite microstructures in the weld metal, produced using high-Ti, low-Al FCAW or SAW consumables with Ar+CO₂ shielding. The same metallurgical principles apply to the Charpy impact testing qualification of these joints per DNVGL-OS-F101 Appendix C.

LNG Storage and Cryogenic Applications

Welded 9% Ni steel for LNG storage tanks (EN 13458, JIS B8265) requires Charpy CVN ≥ 41 J at −196°C. While this is primarily achieved by the fully austenitic microstructure of the weld metal (using high-Ni or Inconel-type consumables), the transition joints between 9% Ni and structural steels use low-temperature FCAW consumables where acicular ferrite is the target microstructure for the ferritic weld zones.

Pressure Vessel Fabrication

ASME Section VIII Div. 2 and PD 5500 pressure vessels for sour service (wet H₂S) require not only CVN toughness qualification but also hardness limits (typically HV10 ≤ 248 in weld metal and HAZ per NACE MR0175/ISO 15156). Acicular ferrite weld metal typically achieves 200–250 HV, making it compatible with both toughness and hardness requirements in C–Mn and low-alloy pressure vessel fabrication without post-weld heat treatment in many cases.

Quantitative Assessment of Acicular Ferrite Content

Point counting metallography (ASTM E562) is the standard method for quantifying acicular ferrite volume fraction in weld metal cross-sections. The procedure involves:

  • Mounting and polishing transverse weld cross-sections to 0.05 μm OPS finish.
  • Etching with 2% nital for 5–15 seconds to reveal grain boundaries and lath boundaries.
  • Photographing representative fields at 200× (optical) or SEM BSE at 500×.
  • Applying a systematic point-counting grid (minimum 500 points per field, minimum 5 fields per sample location).
  • Classifying each point as: acicular ferrite (AF), Widmanstätten ferrite (WF), grain-boundary allotriomorphic ferrite (GBF), bainite (B), martensite (M), or retained austenite (RA).
  • Reporting mean volume fraction ± 95% confidence interval.

EBSD (electron backscatter diffraction) mapping provides a more objective classification based on misorientation angle distributions and can resolve ambiguous cases between AF and upper bainite. Hardness testing methods (Vickers or Knoop microindentation) can complement metallographic assessment, as AF and upper bainite have overlapping hardness ranges (200–280 HV), while martensite is generally >350 HV for low-alloy steels.

Relationship to HAZ Microstructure

While acicular ferrite is primarily a weld metal phenomenon, understanding its formation is essential for interpreting the HAZ microstructure in adjacent base plate zones. The coarse-grained HAZ (CGHAZ, peak temperature 1100–1400°C) experiences austenite grain coarsening to 50–300 μm, substantially reducing the grain boundary area available for allotriomorphic ferrite nucleation. In modern TMCP steels (thermomechanically controlled processed, containing Nb and Ti), the CGHAZ may form a predominantly bainitic or martensitic microstructure with toughness significantly below that of the weld metal. The martensite formation in the CGHAZ is therefore a critical concern in high heat input welding of HSLA steels.

Acicular ferrite analogs in the HAZ are only observed in titanium-boron TMCP steels where TiN particles survive the thermal cycle and can provide intragranular nucleation sites in the fine-grained and intercritical HAZ zones. This is an active area of alloy and process development for ultra-high-strength pipeline steels (X100, X120).

Frequently Asked Questions

What is acicular ferrite and why does it form in weld metal?

Acicular ferrite (AF) is a fine, randomly-oriented, interlocking ferrite morphology that nucleates intragranularly on non-metallic inclusions within the prior austenite grain interior. It forms during cooling of low-alloy steel weld metal when the austenite-to-ferrite transformation is delayed at grain boundaries by alloying elements (Mn, Si, Mo), forcing nucleation at internal oxide/sulfide inclusions at intermediate temperatures of roughly 550–700°C. The interlocking needle morphology creates a high density of high-angle grain boundaries that impede crack propagation, delivering superior Charpy CVN toughness compared to Widmanstätten ferrite or grain-boundary allotriomorphic ferrite.

How does acicular ferrite differ from bainite?

Both acicular ferrite and bainite are sub-eutectoid transformation products forming below the bainite start (Bs) temperature via a displacive (shear) mechanism without long-range carbon diffusion. The key distinction is nucleation site: bainite nucleates at prior austenite grain boundaries and grows inward as sheaves of parallel sub-units, whereas acicular ferrite nucleates intragranularly at inclusions and radiates in multiple directions to create the characteristic interlocking morphology. This different nucleation site produces a finer, less aligned microstructure in AF compared to bainitic ferrite sheaves, resulting in a shorter effective grain size (crack deflection path) and higher toughness. For detailed coverage of bainite, see the bainite microstructure guide.

What types of inclusions most effectively nucleate acicular ferrite?

The most potent inclusion nucleants are complex oxides in the 0.2–2.0 μm size range, particularly titanium oxide (TiO, Ti₂O₃). These are effective due to a good crystallographic match with the BCC ferrite lattice and a disregistry of approximately 3%, allowing an epitaxial ledge mechanism to operate. MnS particles enhance nucleation potency when co-precipitated with oxide cores. Al₂O₃ inclusions are poor nucleants because of large lattice misfit with ferrite, which is why minimising aluminium in the weld deposit (<0.005 wt%) is essential. Over-large inclusions (>3 μm) reduce toughness by acting as void nucleation sites during impact loading.

How does heat input affect acicular ferrite content in weld metal?

Heat input controls the cooling rate through the austenite transformation range. Moderate heat input (1.0–2.5 kJ/mm for typical low-alloy structural steels) produces cooling rates that pass through the acicular ferrite transformation window (approximately 550–700°C), maximising AF volume fraction. Excessively high heat input (>3.5 kJ/mm) slows cooling into the upper transformation range, promoting coarse grain-boundary allotriomorphic ferrite and Widmanstätten ferrite. Very low heat input pushes the microstructure toward martensite/bainite. Optimum AF content of 50–70% by volume correlates with peak CVN toughness in multi-run SMAW and SAW deposits on C–Mn and low-alloy steels.

What welding consumable compositions promote acicular ferrite?

Consumable chemistry for maximum acicular ferrite targets: 1.3–1.7 wt% Mn, 0.3–0.5 wt% Si, 0.005–0.015 wt% Ti (deposit), 0.001–0.003 wt% B, 0.5–2.0 wt% Ni, and <0.005 wt% Al. Titanium forms TiO nucleants; boron suppresses grain-boundary nucleation and redirects the transformation to inclusion sites; nickel improves toughness without closing the AF transformation window. Aluminium must be minimised because Al scavenges oxygen to form Al₂O₃ inclusions that are poor AF nucleants, displacing the beneficial TiO-based inclusions.

How is acicular ferrite identified in optical metallography?

Optical identification requires: (1) mechanical polish to 0.05 μm OPS finish; (2) etching with 2% nital, which preferentially reveals high-angle boundaries between ferrite laths; (3) examination at 200–500× magnification under bright-field reflected light. Acicular ferrite appears as a fine interlocking mesh of short ferrite needles (≥4:1 aspect ratio) randomly oriented within the prior austenite grain, nucleating from a central point (the inclusion). This contrasts with the parallel-lath sheaf geometry of bainite and the continuous grain-boundary network of allotriomorphic ferrite. EBSD maps confirm the high-angle misorientation between adjacent laths. Reference micrographs are available in ASM Handbook Vol. 9 (Metallography and Microstructures, 2004).

What is the effective grain size of acicular ferrite and how does it relate to CVN toughness?

The effective grain size for cleavage fracture in acicular ferrite is typically 5–20 μm, compared with 50–200 μm for the prior austenite grain size. By the Hall-Petch-based cleavage fracture stress relationship, reducing effective grain size d raises the cleavage fracture stress σf ∝ d⁻½, shifting the ductile-to-brittle transition temperature (DBTT) to lower temperatures. Well-optimised AF weld metal achieves DBTT values of −60°C to −80°C in C–Mn linepipe grades, with Charpy CVN energies of 120–200 J at −40°C, meeting the demanding requirements of Arctic pipeline codes (DNV-ST-F101, CSA Z245.1) and offshore structural codes (NORSOK M-120).

Can acicular ferrite form in the HAZ as well as in the weld metal?

Acicular ferrite formation in the HAZ is far less common than in weld metal because the HAZ does not contain the oxygen-rich inclusion population that drives intragranular nucleation. Weld metal typically contains 200–500 ppm oxygen (as inclusions), whereas base metal and HAZ oxygen levels are <50 ppm. In the HAZ, austenite transformation products are governed primarily by cooling rate and hardenability: the coarse-grained HAZ (CGHAZ) typically produces bainite or martensite in medium-hardenability steels. Acicular ferrite-like morphologies have been observed in the intercritical HAZ of some titanium-boron TMCP steels where retained TiN particles provide nucleation sites, but this remains exceptional.

Recommended Reading

📚
Steels: Microstructure and Properties — Bhadeshia & Honeycombe
The definitive graduate-level reference on steel microstructure, including an authoritative treatment of acicular ferrite, bainite, and martensite transformation theory.
View on Amazon
📚
Metallurgy of Welding — J.F. Lancaster
A comprehensive text covering weld metal solidification, inclusion effects, HAZ metallurgy, and the role of microstructure in weld toughness for all major alloy systems.
View on Amazon
📚
ASM Handbook Vol. 6: Welding, Brazing, and Soldering
ASM International’s authoritative reference on welding processes, weld metal microstructure, consumable selection, and qualification testing for structural, pressure vessel, and pipeline applications.
View on Amazon
📚
Steels: Processing, Structure, and Performance — G. Krauss
A clear and rigorous treatment of steel processing and microstructure relationships, including bainite, acicular ferrite, and mechanical property correlations essential for materials engineers.
View on Amazon

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