Martensite Start Temperature Calculator — Ms, Mf, Retained Austenite, and Hardness from Steel Composition
The martensite start temperature (Ms) is the temperature at which the diffusionless shear transformation from austenite to martensite begins on cooling of steel from the austenitising temperature. It is the single most important transformation temperature in steel heat treatment: it governs quench severity requirements, retained austenite content, as-quenched hardness, dimensional change, cold-cracking risk in welding, and the minimum preheat needed for hardenable steels. This calculator implements four validated empirical equations — Andrews (1965), Steven–Haynes (1956), Barbier (2012), and Kung (1992) — plus the Koistinen–Marburger kinetics equation for retained austenite fraction, Vickers hardness estimation, and a live plot of the martensite transformation curve.
Key Takeaways
- Carbon is the most powerful Ms depressant: each 0.1 wt%C reduces Ms by approximately 42 °C (Andrews) — the non-linear Barbier equation is more accurate above 0.5 wt%C.
- Koistinen–Marburger equation: fM = 1 − exp[−0.011 × (Ms − T)] describes martensite fraction as a function of quench temperature below Ms.
- Retained austenite (RA) at room temperature is given by: fγ = exp[−0.011 × (Ms − 25)]. For Ms = 200 °C, RA ≈ 15%.
- Mf (martensite finish) ≈ Ms − 150 to Ms − 215 °C. If Mf < 25 °C, sub-zero treatment is needed to reduce RA.
- As-quenched Vickers hardness is primarily a function of carbon content: HV ≈ 127 + 949 × %C + 27 × %Si + 11 × %Mn + 8 × %Ni + 16 × %Cr + 21 × %Mo (Seyffarth, for fully martensitic microstructure).
- All four equations have ±15–30 °C accuracy for conventional low–alloy steels; accuracy degrades for compositions outside each equation’s calibration range.
+ Koistinen–Marburger retained austenite · Mf estimation · As-quenched HV · Live transformation curve
(1965)
(1956)
(2012)
(1992)
(Ms − 215)
(Koistinen–Marburger)
(Seyffarth, fully mart.)
The Four Empirical Ms Equations: Derivation and Accuracy
All empirical Ms equations are derived by multiple linear (or non-linear) regression of measured Ms temperatures against steel composition from a calibration dataset. Each equation is therefore only as reliable as the composition range covered by its training data. The calculator above presents four equations to give a range of predictions and highlight disagreement — large spread (> 50 °C between equations) signals that the composition is outside the calibration range of at least one equation and that experimental measurement is advisable.
Andrews (1965) — The Standard Reference
Andrews (1965) — Journal of the Iron and Steel Institute, 203, 721–727:
Ms (°C) = 539 − 423×%C − 30.4×%Mn − 17.7×%Ni − 12.1×%Cr
− 7.5×%Mo + 10×%Co − 7.5×%Si
Calibration range:
C: 0.03–0.64% | Mn: 0.17–1.96% | Ni: 0–4.89%
Cr: 0–9.41% | Mo: 0–4.27% | Co: 0–9.0%
Si: 0–1.99%
Dataset: 66 steels (includes plain-carbon, Mn, Cr-Mo, Ni-Cr-Mo, Co steels)
Standard deviation: ±17°C on training data
Reported coefficient effects (per 1 wt%):
C: −423°C (dominant depressant)
Mn: −30.4°C
Ni: −17.7°C
Cr: −12.1°C
Mo: −7.5°C
Co: +10.0°C (only common element that RAISES Ms)
Si: −7.5°C
LIMITATION: Linear in carbon — overestimates Ms above 0.6%C where
the non-linear carbon effect becomes significant.
Steven and Haynes (1956)
Steven & Haynes (1956) — JISI, 183, 349–359:
Ms (°C) = 561 − 474×%C − 33×%Mn − 17×%Ni − 17×%Cr − 21×%Mo
Calibration range:
C: 0.1–0.55% | Mn: 0.2–1.7% | Ni: 0–5%
Cr: 0–3.5% | Mo: 0–1%
Dataset: Low-alloy steels for structural and engineering applications
No Si, Co, Al, W terms
Note: Higher carbon coefficient (474 vs 423 in Andrews) often gives
lower Ms predictions for medium-carbon steels. No Co term — not
applicable for tool steels with significant Co content.
Barbier (2012) — Non-Linear Carbon Treatment
Barbier (2012) — Advanced Engineering Materials, 14(8):
Ms (°C) = 565 − 600×(1 − exp(−0.96×%C))
− 31×%Mn − 13×%Cr − 9×%Mo − 18×%Ni
+ 10×%Co + 15×%Al
Calibration range:
C: 0–1.5% | Mn: 0–3.5% | Cr: 0–16%
Mo: 0–5% | Ni: 0–12% | Co: 0–10%
Al: 0–1.5%
Dataset: 780 steels — much broader than Andrews or Steven–Haynes
Includes high-Cr (martensitic stainless) and high-C steels
Key advantage: Non-linear carbon term captures the diminishing
effect of C on Ms at high concentrations (>0.5%C).
At low C: 600×(1−exp(−0.96C)) ≈ 600×0.96×C = 576C (similar to linear)
At C=0.5: term = 600×(1−exp(−0.48)) = 600×0.381 = 229°C
At C=1.0: term = 600×(1−exp(−0.96)) = 600×0.617 = 370°C
vs Andrews linear: 423×1.0 = 423°C (overestimates Ms suppression)
RECOMMENDED for compositions with C > 0.5% or Cr > 5%.
Kung (1992)
Kung (1992) — Metallurgical Transactions A, 23:
Ms (°C) = 539 − 423×%C − 30.4×%Mn − 7.5×%Si
− 17.7×%Ni − 12.1×%Cr − 7.5×%Mo
− 7.5×%W − 10×%Cu
Identical to Andrews for elements without W and Cu.
Adds W (−7.5°C/%) and Cu (−10°C/%) terms.
Useful for tungsten-containing tool steels and Cu-bearing HSLA steels.
Note: W coefficient of −7.5°C/% is relatively small — at typical
M2 W content of 6.4%, this contributes only −48°C to Ms suppression,
less than the carbon contribution of ~270°C.
Koistinen–Marburger Equation: Martensite Fraction and Retained Austenite
The Koistinen–Marburger (K–M) equation (1959) describes the athermal kinetics of martensitic transformation — the fraction of martensite formed at any temperature between Ms and Mf, without the time-dependence characteristic of diffusional transformations. It is one of the most widely validated empirical equations in physical metallurgy and is implemented in virtually all commercial phase transformation simulation software (Thermo-Calc TC-PRISMA, JMatPro, SYSWELD).
Koistinen–Marburger Equation (1959):
Martensite fraction:
f_M(T) = 1 − exp[−α × (Ms − T)]
Retained austenite fraction:
f_γ(T) = 1 − f_M = exp[−α × (Ms − T)]
Where:
T = temperature at which fraction is evaluated [°C]
Ms = martensite start temperature [°C] (from empirical equation)
α = rate constant = 0.011 °C⁻¹ (Koistinen–Marburger original)
Alternative α values reported in literature:
α = 0.011: plain carbon and low-alloy steels (original KM)
α = 0.008–0.010: high-alloy steels (Cr-Ni austenitic compositions)
α = 0.013–0.015: some Fe-Ni alloys
Retained austenite after quenching to ambient (Tq = 25°C):
f_γ(25) = exp[−0.011 × (Ms − 25)]
Examples:
Ms = 400°C: f_γ = exp(−4.12) = 0.016 ≈ 2% RA
Ms = 300°C: f_γ = exp(−3.025) = 0.049 ≈ 5% RA
Ms = 200°C: f_γ = exp(−1.925) = 0.146 ≈ 15% RA
Ms = 100°C: f_γ = exp(−0.825) = 0.439 ≈ 44% RA
Sub-zero treatment benefit (quench to −80°C):
At Ms = 200°C, Tq = −80°C:
f_γ = exp(−0.011 × 280) = exp(−3.08) = 0.046 ≈ 5% RA (vs 15% at 25°C)
Deep cryogenic treatment (−196°C, LN₂):
At Ms = 200°C, Tq = −196°C:
f_γ = exp(−0.011 × 396) = exp(−4.36) = 0.013 ≈ 1% RA
As-Quenched Hardness Prediction
As-quenched martensite hardness is primarily governed by the carbon content dissolved in austenite before quenching. Alloying elements (Cr, Ni, Mo, Mn) that reduce Ms improve hardenability (depth of hardening) but do not significantly increase the maximum attainable hardness at a given carbon content. The relationship between carbon content and maximum as-quenched Vickers hardness in fully martensitic steel is well established.
As-Quenched Hardness — Seyffarth Equation (fully martensitic):
HV = 127 + 949×%C + 27×%Si + 11×%Mn + 8×%Ni + 16×%Cr + 21×%Mo
(valid for fully martensitic microstructure, no bainite or ferrite)
Simplified carbon-only approximation (±20 HV):
HV_max ≈ 127 + 949×%C
HRC conversion (approximate, valid HRC 20–65):
HRC ≈ (HV − 80) / 10.3 [rough; use official conversion tables for precision]
Carbon vs. maximum hardness:
0.10%C: HV ≈ 222 (HRC ≈ 14) — case-hardened steel base
0.20%C: HV ≈ 317 (HRC ≈ 23)
0.30%C: HV ≈ 412 (HRC ≈ 32)
0.40%C: HV ≈ 507 (HRC ≈ 41)
0.50%C: HV ≈ 601 (HRC ≈ 50)
0.60%C: HV ≈ 696 (HRC ≈ 59)
0.80%C: HV ≈ 886 (HRC ≈ 62, limited by RA)
1.00%C: HV ≈ 1076 (HRC ≈ 65, limited by RA)
NOTE: Above ~0.6%C, actual measured hardness falls short of
the fully-martensitic prediction because retained austenite
(soft phase) accumulates. The Seyffarth equation gives the
theoretical fully-martensitic value — the actual value is
approximately HV_actual ≈ HV_max × (1 − f_γ) + HV_γ × f_γ
where HV_γ ≈ 150–300 HV for austenite.
Engineering Significance of Ms Temperature by Steel Category
| Steel Grade / Type | Typical Ms (°C) | Typical Mf (°C) | RA at 25°C quench | Sub-zero needed? | Engineering implication |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Plain C (0.2%C) | 430–450 | 220–240 | <1% | No | Very low RA; transformation complete at ambient. Low HV (≈320). |
| S355 / A572 structural | 420–460 | 210–250 | <2% | No | Martensite in HAZ on fast cooling; preheat to slow cooling and temper HAZ |
| 4140 (42CrMo4) | 310–370 | 100–160 | 3–5% | No (optional) | Good hardenability; Mf near ambient; minimal RA. Target 50–55 HRC |
| 4340 | 290–330 | 80–120 | 5–8% | No (optional) | Deep hardening; Mf just above ambient; low RA in sections below 75 mm |
| H13 (0.40%C, 5Cr) | 310–360 | 100–150 | 3–6% | No | Low RA acceptable; double temper removes remainder |
| D2 (1.55%C, 12Cr) | 220–280 | 10–70 | 10–18% | Recommended | High RA from high C and Cr; sub-zero before first temper for precision tooling |
| M2 (austenitised at 1220°C) | 180–240 | −35 to +25 | 15–30% | Yes (mandatory for precision) | Very high RA; triple temper required; sub-zero preferred before first temper |
| P91 (9Cr-1Mo-V) | 400–440 | 190–230 | <2% | No | Low RA; Ms relatively high. Preheat 200°C minimum in welding (ASME B31.1) |
| 17-4 PH SS | 100–130 | −90 to −120 | 30–45% | Yes (for condition A) | Very low Ms from high Ni+Cr; substantial RA in as-quenched condition; transforms on ageing |
| Maraging 250 | −30 to +20 | −200 to −240 | 50–90% | Critical | Austenitic above ambient; martensite on cooling; strengthened by intermetallic precipitation not C |
Table 1 — Typical Ms, Mf, and retained austenite for common engineering steels. D2 and M2 compositions are given for the austenitised (dissolved) condition — actual values vary with austenitising temperature and time. All Ms values are estimates using the Andrews equation; verify experimentally for critical applications.
Worked Example: SAE 4140 Steel
SAE 4140 (42CrMo4) is one of the most widely used alloy engineering steels. A typical heat from a steel mill has the following composition (by OES): 0.41%C, 0.84%Mn, 0.23%Si, 0.98%Cr, 0.21%Ni, 0.19%Mo. Calculate Ms, Mf, retained austenite at 25 °C and at −80 °C, and as-quenched hardness.
SAE 4140 — Complete Ms Calculation
Composition: 0.41C, 0.84Mn, 0.23Si, 0.98Cr, 0.21Ni, 0.19Mo
Andrews (1965):
Ms = 539 − 423(0.41) − 30.4(0.84) − 17.7(0.21) − 12.1(0.98) − 7.5(0.19) − 7.5(0.23)
= 539 − 173.4 − 25.5 − 3.7 − 11.9 − 1.4 − 1.7
= 539 − 217.6
= 321°C
Steven–Haynes (1956):
Ms = 561 − 474(0.41) − 33(0.84) − 17(0.21) − 17(0.98) − 21(0.19)
= 561 − 194.3 − 27.7 − 3.6 − 16.7 − 4.0
= 561 − 246.3
= 315°C
Barbier (2012):
Carbon term: 600×(1−exp(−0.96×0.41)) = 600×(1−exp(−0.394)) = 600×0.325 = 194.9
Ms = 565 − 194.9 − 31(0.84) − 13(0.98) − 9(0.19) − 18(0.21)
= 565 − 194.9 − 26.0 − 12.7 − 1.7 − 3.8
= 565 − 239.1
= 326°C
Mean Ms = (321 + 315 + 326) / 3 = 321°C (use this for Mf and RA)
Mf estimate:
Mf = Ms − 215 = 321 − 215 = 106°C
Retained austenite — Koistinen–Marburger:
At 25°C: f_γ = exp[−0.011×(321−25)] = exp[−0.011×296] = exp(−3.256) = 0.038 ≈ 4% RA
At −80°C: f_γ = exp[−0.011×(321−(−80))] = exp[−0.011×401] = exp(−4.411) = 0.012 ≈ 1% RA
As-quenched hardness (Seyffarth, fully martensitic):
HV = 127 + 949(0.41) + 27(0.23) + 11(0.84) + 8(0.21) + 16(0.98) + 21(0.19)
= 127 + 389.1 + 6.2 + 9.2 + 1.7 + 15.7 + 4.0
= 553 HV ≈ 53 HRC
Corrected for RA at 25°C quench:
HV_actual ≈ 553 × (1−0.038) + 200 × 0.038 = 553 × 0.962 + 7.6 = 540 HV ≈ 52 HRC
Preheat assessment:
CE(IIW) = 0.41 + 0.84/6 + (0.98+0.19)/5 + 0.21/15
= 0.41 + 0.140 + 0.234 + 0.014 = 0.798
Minimum preheat (Dearden-O’Neill): 150–200°C (CE > 0.6 → preheat mandatory)
Application to Welding: Ms Temperature and Preheat Calculation
Ms temperature is a critical input for weld preheat determination because it governs both the susceptibility to hydrogen-assisted cold cracking (HACC) and the minimum preheat temperature needed to prevent it. The connection is indirect: the empirical carbon equivalent (CE) formulas used in preheat calculations are linear combinations of alloying elements that also appear in Ms equations — because both properties respond to the same fundamental microstructural variable, hardenability. High hardenability (low Ms) means the HAZ forms martensite at faster cooling rates, and martensite is the microstructure most susceptible to HACC.
Carbon Equivalent Formulas for Preheat Determination:
CE(IIW) = %C + %Mn/6 + (%Cr + %Mo + %V)/5 + (%Ni + %Cu)/15
Pcm (Ito-Bessyo, better for C < 0.18%):
Pcm = %C + %Si/30 + (%Mn+%Cu+%Cr)/20 + %Ni/60 + %Mo/15 + %V/10 + 5%B
Relationship to Ms (Graville’s Pcm approach):
Minimum preheat T_p (°C) ≈ 1440 × Pcm − 392 (approximate guide)
Connection to Ms:
Lower CE ↜ higher Ms ↜ martensite forms at higher temperature
↜ faster H diffusion during transformation
↜ less H accumulation at the time of martensite formation
↜ lower cracking susceptibility
Practical guidance from ASME B31.1 preheat table:
P91/Grade 91 (CE ≈ 0.80): T_p = 200°C minimum; Ms ≈ 420°C
4140 (CE ≈ 0.80): T_p = 150–200°C; Ms ≈ 330°C
S355 (CE ≈ 0.45): T_p = 50–100°C (thin sections: none)
304L SS (austenitic): No martensite; no preheat required for HAC
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Andrews (1965) equation for martensite start temperature?
What is the Koistinen-Marburger equation and how is it used to predict retained austenite?
How does carbon content affect the martensite start temperature?
How is the martensite start temperature used to design preheat for welding?
What is the Mf temperature and why is it important for heat treatment design?
How is as-quenched hardness related to Ms temperature and carbon content?
Which Ms equation is most accurate for high-alloy and stainless steels?
What is the effect of austenite grain size on the martensite start temperature?
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