Fundamentals

TTT Diagram Explained — Time-Temperature-Transformation in Steel

📅 March 25, 2026 ⏱ 37 min read 👤 metallurgyzone 🏷 austempering   bainite TTT   C-curve pearlite nose  
March 25, 2026 · 12 min read · Fundamentals

TTT Diagram Explained — Time-Temperature-Transformation in Steel: C-Curves, Martensite, and Heat Treatment

The Time-Temperature-Transformation (TTT) diagram — also called the isothermal transformation diagram or S-curve — is the most important single tool in steel heat treatment metallurgy. It maps, for a given steel composition and prior austenite grain size, the kinetics of austenite decomposition as a function of temperature and time under isothermal (constant-temperature) conditions. Every C-curve, every nose, every Ms line encodes the thermodynamic driving forces and diffusion kinetics that govern what microstructure forms when austenite is quenched and held at any temperature. Reading and interpreting the TTT diagram is a core competency for any metallurgist, heat treatment engineer, or materials scientist working with steels.

Key Takeaways
  • TTT diagrams show isothermal transformations: steel is quenched instantaneously to a fixed temperature and held there. CCT diagrams show continuous cooling transformations and are always shifted to longer times and lower temperatures relative to TTT.
  • The C-shape of transformation curves results from two competing Arrhenius dependencies: thermodynamic driving force (increasing with undercooling) vs. atomic diffusivity (decreasing with temperature). Their product is maximised at the nose.
  • Martensite formation is athermal and diffusionless — it does not appear as a C-curve but as horizontal Ms and Mf lines. The fraction of martensite formed at any temperature below Ms is given by the Koistinen-Marburger equation.
  • The critical cooling rate (CCR) is the minimum rate to miss the pearlite/bainite nose and form 100% martensite. For plain eutectoid steel CCR ≈ 140°C/s; for 4140 alloy steel CCR ≈ 30°C/s.
  • Alloying elements (Mn, Cr, Mo, Ni, B) shift C-curves right, increasing hardenability. Mo creates a ‘bay’ or separation between pearlite and bainite C-curves, exploited in martempering.
  • Austempering (isothermal bainite transformation) and martempering (stepped martensite quench) are industrial processes designed directly from the TTT diagram.
Ms Temperature and Martensite Fraction Calculator
Andrews (1965) empirical equations | Koistinen-Marburger kinetics
TTT Diagram — Eutectoid Steel (0.77 wt% C), ASTM 7 Prior Austenite Grain Size 100 150 230 300 380 460 540 620 700 727°C Temperature (°C) 0.1s 1s 10s 100s 1000s 10⁴s 10⁵s Time (log scale, seconds) A1 Ps Pf Pearlite (ferrite + Fe₃C lamellae) Nose ~550°C ~1s Bs Bf Bainite (ferrite + carbides) ~400°C ~5s Ms 230°C Mf 130°C Martensite (athermal, BCT, f_M ↑ as T ↓) Supercooled Austenite WQ 100%M OQ M+B Air B+P Furnace cool Coarse P CCR ~140°C/s Ps — pearlite start (1%) Pf — pearlite finish (99%) Bs — bainite start Bf — bainite finish Ms / Mf — martensite CCR — critical cooling rate
Fig. 1 — Schematic TTT diagram for eutectoid (0.77 wt% C) steel, ASTM grain size 7. Solid green curves: pearlite start (Ps, 1% transformed) and finish (Pf, 99%). Solid purple curves: bainite start (Bs) and finish (Bf). Red solid horizontal line: Ms (230°C). Red dashed: Mf (130°C). Cooling curve overlays show products: WQ = 100% martensite; OQ = martensite + bainite; air cool = bainite + pearlite; furnace cool = coarse pearlite. The critical cooling rate (CCR, red dashed diagonal) is tangent to the Ps nose at ≈550°C, 1 s. © metallurgyzone.com

How to Read the TTT Diagram

The TTT diagram has temperature on the vertical axis (linear scale, °C) and time on the horizontal axis (logarithmic scale, seconds). The diagram is constructed for a specific austenite composition and prior austenite grain size, and is valid only for isothermal conditions — meaning the steel is assumed to be quenched instantaneously from the austenitising temperature to the holding temperature, arriving there before any transformation has occurred.

The C-Curves: Pearlite and Bainite Transformation Kinetics

Two sets of C-shaped curves appear on a typical TTT diagram for a plain or low-alloy steel. Each set has a start curve (conventionally defined at 1% transformation) and a finish curve (99% transformation). The region to the left of any start curve represents untransformed supercooled austenite; between start and finish, transformation is in progress; to the right of the finish curve, the transformation is essentially complete.

  • Upper C-curves (pearlite): Occur at temperatures just below A1 (727°C) down to approximately 550°C for eutectoid steel. Pearlite is a lamellar eutectoid product of ferrite and cementite, formed by a diffusion-controlled cooperative growth mechanism. The interlamellar spacing decreases as the transformation temperature decreases, giving progressively finer and stronger pearlite. See the Pearlite Colony Growth article for the full treatment of lamellar spacing and colony nucleation kinetics.
  • Lower C-curves (bainite): Occur between approximately 550°C and Ms (around 230°C for eutectoid steel). Bainite forms by a mixed shear-diffusion mechanism: the ferrite sublattice forms by shear (like martensite) but carbon is then rejected by diffusion and precipitates as carbides. Upper bainite (400–550°C) has inter-lath cementite films; lower bainite (<350°C) has intra-lath carbides on specific habit planes. The Bainite Microstructure article covers this in full crystallographic detail.

Why the C-Shape Arises: Competing Arrhenius Kinetics

The characteristic C-shape is a direct consequence of two competing temperature-dependent factors that together control the overall transformation rate:

Overall transformation rate: R(T) ∝ N_dot × v  (nucleation rate × growth velocity)

Nucleation rate:  N_dot ∝ exp(−ΔG* / kT) × exp(−Q_diff / RT)
  ΔG* ∝ 1 / ΔT²   (activation barrier decreases as undercooling ΔT increases)

Growth velocity:  v ∝ D × ΔG / RT
  D = D₀ × exp(−Q_D / RT)   (diffusivity: Arrhenius, increases with T)

Near A1 (small ΔT):   ΔG* very large → near-zero nucleation → slow transformation
Near Ms (large ΔT):   D → 0 → near-zero growth → slow transformation
At nose (optimal ΔT): N_dot and v both significant → maximum transformation rate

The product of these two opposing exponentials creates
a maximum at intermediate temperature → the C-curve nose.
Practical reading note: The log-time axis means that small horizontal distances on the TTT diagram represent enormous differences in real time. Moving 10 mm to the right on a diagram with 10 decades on the x-axis might represent a factor of 100 in time. Always verify which time decades correspond to which x-positions before interpreting cooling curves against the C-curves.

Transformation Products and Their Properties

Temperature Range (eutectoid steel) Product Typical Hardness Elongation (%) KIC (MPa√m) Key Characteristic
690–727°C (just below A1)Coarse pearlite10–20 HRC20–30~60–80Very soft; coarse lamellae (S₀ 600–800 nm); good machinability
600–690°CMedium pearlite20–30 HRC15–25~50–65Intermediate properties; rail steel range
540–600°C (nose)Fine pearlite (sorbite)30–43 HRC10–18~40–55Finest lamellae (S₀ 80–150 nm); highest pearlite strength; patented wire
400–540°CUpper bainite38–46 HRC6–12~30–50Ferrite sheaves + inter-lath cementite films; moderate toughness
250–400°CLower bainite45–58 HRC4–8~40–70Intra-lath carbides on {112}α planes; best toughness at high hardness
Below Ms (230°C) — as quenchedMartensite (BCT)58–66 HRC1–3<20 (as-quenched)Supersaturated C in BCT lattice; maximum hardness; must be tempered
Tempered martensite (200–400°C)Tempered martensite42–58 HRC6–1540–100Fe₃C precipitates; excellent strength-toughness combination; engineering standard

Martensite: Athermal Transformation and the Koistinen-Marburger Equation

Martensite is unique among steel transformation products: it forms by a diffusionless, athermal shear transformation that requires no time at temperature. Instead of a C-curve, the TTT diagram shows two horizontal lines — Ms and Mf — whose temperatures are fixed solely by the chemical composition of the austenite. The crystallographic mechanism involves simultaneous cooperative atomic displacements that preserve the iron lattice topology while trapping all dissolved carbon in interstitial positions of the body-centred tetragonal (BCT) cell. The tetragonality ratio c/a increases linearly with carbon content: c/a = 1 + 0.046 × (wt% C).

The Koistinen-Marburger Equation

The fraction of martensite formed at any temperature below Ms was empirically quantified by Koistinen and Marburger (1959) by systematic dilatometry measurements on a wide range of steels:

Koistinen-Marburger (K-M) equation:
  f_M = 1 − exp[−α × (Ms − T)]

Where:
  f_M  = volume fraction of martensite (0 to 1.0)
  Ms   = martensite start temperature (°C)
  T    = quench/hold temperature (°C, must be < Ms)
  α    = 0.011 K⁻¹   (empirical constant; valid for carbon steels)
         [Some authors use 0.0110–0.0115 depending on steel]

Application — eutectoid steel (Ms ≈ 230°C):

  At room temperature (T = 25°C):
    f_M = 1 − exp[−0.011 × (230 − 25)]
        = 1 − exp[−0.011 × 205]
        = 1 − exp(−2.255)
        = 1 − 0.1046 = 0.895   →  89.5% martensite; 10.5% retained austenite

  At T = −80°C (dry ice treatment):
    f_M = 1 − exp[−0.011 × 310]
        = 1 − exp(−3.41)
        = 1 − 0.033 = 0.967   →  96.7% martensite; 3.3% retained austenite

  To achieve < 2% retained austenite:
    0.02 = exp[−0.011 × (230 − T)]  →  T ≈ −105°C  (liquid nitrogen territory)
Retained austenite consequences: Retained austenite reduces hardness, causes dimensional instability (transforms during service), and can impair fatigue resistance in highly stressed components. For precision tools, bearing raceways, and gauge blocks, sub-zero treatment at −80°C (dry ice/alcohol) or −196°C (liquid nitrogen) is applied immediately after quenching and before tempering. Sub-zero treatment after tempering is ineffective because the austenite becomes stabilised against further transformation (thermal stabilisation) by the diffusional processes during tempering.

Factors Controlling Ms Temperature

Ms is the single most important datum on the TTT diagram for quench design. It is controlled by austenite composition through the Andrews (1965) empirical equation, which the calculator above implements:

Andrews (1965) Ms equation:
  Ms (°C) = 539 − 423·C − 30.4·Mn − 17.7·Ni − 12.1·Cr − 7.5·Mo

Approximate elemental effects on Ms:
  Carbon (C):        −423°C / wt%   (strongest depressant — interstitial)
  Manganese (Mn):    −30.4°C / wt%
  Nickel (Ni):       −17.7°C / wt%
  Chromium (Cr):     −12.1°C / wt%
  Molybdenum (Mo):   −7.5°C / wt%
  Silicon (Si):      +8°C / wt%     (mild raiser)
  Cobalt (Co):       +10°C / wt%    (raiser)

Examples:
  AISI 1080 (0.80C, 0.75Mn):            Ms ≈ 539 − 338 − 23 = 178°C
  AISI 4140 (0.40C, 0.90Mn, 1.0Cr, 0.20Mo): Ms ≈ 539 − 169 − 27 − 12 − 1.5 = 329°C
  D2 tool steel (~1.5C, 12Cr, 0.8Mo):    Ms ≈ 539 − 635 − 145 − 6 = −247°C
  (D2 Ms is below −100°C → deep cryogenic treatment essential)

Effect of Alloying Elements on the TTT Diagram

The most commercially significant effect of alloying is the shift of C-curves to longer times, increasing the time available to cool through the transformation temperature range without forming pearlite or bainite. This is quantified as hardenability — the depth to which martensite can be formed in a quenched bar. Different elements affect pearlite and bainite kinetics differently:

Element Effect on Pearlite C-curve Effect on Bainite C-curve Effect on Ms Primary Mechanism
Carbon (C)Shifts right; depresses A1Shifts right moderatelyStrong depression (−423°C/wt%)Slows Fe diffusion; strong Ms depressant
Manganese (Mn)Strongly shifts rightShifts rightModerate depressionRetards all diffusion; reduces A3/A1; partitions to austenite
Chromium (Cr)Strongly shifts rightShifts right moderatelyModerate depressionForms Cr-carbides; retards C diffusion in austenite
Molybdenum (Mo)Very strongly shifts rightModerate shift rightMinor depressionSegregates to grain boundaries; suppresses ferrite nucleation; creates bay/separation between pearlite and bainite
Nickel (Ni)Shifts rightShifts rightModerate depressionLowers A1; retards transformation uniformly without forming carbides
Boron (B, 0.001–0.003%)Dramatically shifts rightNegligible effectNegligibleSegregates to grain boundaries; specifically suppresses ferrite/pearlite nucleation at boundaries; effective only when Al present to scavenge N
Vanadium (V)Shifts right when dissolvedShifts rightMinor effectVC precipitation in austenite reduces C available for transformation; requires high austenitising T to dissolve
Silicon (Si)Minor right shiftSuppresses cementite formation in bainiteSlight raiseSi suppresses Fe₃C in bainite; enables carbide-free bainite at Si >1.5%

The Mo ‘Bay’: Separation of Pearlite and Bainite C-curves

In steels containing molybdenum (and to a lesser extent, other strong carbide formers), the pearlite and bainite C-curves can become completely separated on the TTT diagram, creating a temperature–time “bay” between them where neither transformation is fast. Molybdenum specifically retards grain-boundary nucleation of pearlite far more strongly than it retards the bainite shear mechanism. This bay is exploited in two important commercial heat treatments: martempering (quench into the bay, hold until temperature equalises through the section, air cool for uniform martensite) and stepped bainite treatments for thick sections in alloy steels like 300M, 4340, and 4330V.

Critical Cooling Rate and Hardenability

The critical cooling rate (CCR) is the minimum cooling rate that avoids the pearlite C-curve nose entirely, producing 100% martensite on continuous cooling. On the TTT diagram it is found by drawing the continuous cooling curve that is tangent to the pearlite start (Ps) nose — the line from the austenitising temperature that just touches the fastest point of Ps without crossing it.

Critical cooling rates for representative steels:

Steel           Composition (simplified)     CCR (°C/s)   Quench for 25mm bar
AISI 1080       0.80C, 0.75Mn                ~140          Water only; limited section
AISI 1045       0.45C, 0.75Mn                ~400          Water, small sections only
AISI 4140       0.40C, 0.90Mn, 1.0Cr, 0.20Mo ~30          Oil quench (any section)
AISI 4340       0.40C, 1.8Ni, 0.80Cr, 0.25Mo  ~5           Oil or even polymer quench
AISI H13 (tool) 0.40C, 5.0Cr, 1.5Mo, 1.0V    ~1           Air quench, large sections
M2 (HSS)        0.85C, 6.0W, 5.0Mo, 4.0Cr     ~0.5         Air quench

The Jominy end-quench test (ASTM A255) measures hardenability empirically:
  A standard bar (25.4mm × 101.6mm) is austenitised and end-quenched.
  Hardness is measured every 1.6mm (1/16") from the quenched end.
  Cooling rate at each position is known from standard charts.
  The resulting hardenability curve (H-band) is compared to the TTT diagram.

Grossmann H-factor (hardenability):
  H = α / (2λ)   (simplified)
  where α = heat transfer coefficient, λ = thermal conductivity
  H = 0.2: still water; H = 0.5: oil; H = 1.0: agitated oil; H = 5.0: agitated water

Industrial Applications: Austempering and Martempering

Austempering

Austempering is a heat treatment designed directly from the TTT diagram to produce a fully bainitic microstructure with superior toughness at equivalent hardness compared to tempered martensite, and with greatly reduced distortion compared to quench-and-temper.

Austempering procedure (design from TTT diagram):

Step 1 — Austenitise: Heat to A3 + 30°C (hypoeutectoid) or A1 + 30°C (hypereutectoid)
         Soak time: typically 30 min + 15 min per 25mm section thickness

Step 2 — Quench into bainite bath: Molten salt (KNO₃/NaNO₂) or hot oil
         Target temperature: within bainite field (250–450°C typically)
         Quench must be fast enough to miss the pearlite nose entirely
         → This limits austempering to section sizes below ~12–15mm for
           plain carbon steels; up to 50–75mm for alloy steels with
           C-curves pushed right by Mn, Mo, Ni additions

Step 3 — Hold isothermally until Bf (bainite finish):
         Read Bf time from TTT diagram + 25% safety margin
         Examples for 0.8%C: 250°C → ~60 min; 350°C → ~20 min; 450°C → ~5 min

Step 4 — Air cool to room temperature
         No martensite transformation occurs → no distortion, no quench cracking

Result: Lower bainite at 45–58 HRC → K_IC typically 40–70 MPa√m
        vs. tempered martensite at equivalent HRC → K_IC typically 20–50 MPa√m
        Superior fatigue resistance; minimal distortion; suitable for thin gears,
        springs, and precision components

Martempering (Marquenching)

Martempering eliminates the distortion caused by conventional direct quenching by equalising the temperature throughout the section before the martensite transformation begins. The steel is quenched into a bath held just above Ms, held until the core and surface reach the same temperature (within the “bay” where neither pearlite nor bainite is forming rapidly), then air-cooled. Martensite forms uniformly through the entire section during the slow air cool rather than progressively from the surface inward, dramatically reducing the differential volume changes that cause warping and cracking.

Martempering procedure:

Step 1 — Austenitise: Same as conventional quench-and-temper

Step 2 — Quench into marquench bath:
         Temperature: Ms + 20°C to Ms + 50°C  (above Ms; in the bay)
         Medium: Molten salt (KNO₃/NaNO₂), hot oil, or hot polymer
         Hold time: sufficient to equalise temperature through section
                    (~1 min per 25mm section for salt; read from TTT Bs curve
                    to ensure bay is maintained — must not form bainite)

Step 3 — Air cool to room temperature:
         Martensite forms uniformly throughout section during this step
         Minimal thermal gradient → minimal distortion vs. direct water/oil quench

Step 4 — Temper immediately (standard Q&T temper cycle)

Limitation: Only works if the steel composition provides a bay (gap between
            pearlite and bainite C-curves). Mo is the most effective element
            for creating this bay. 4140, 4340, 52100 are all routinely martempered.
Alloying Effect on TTT Diagram and Industrial Heat Treatment Paths 100 200 Ms 350 450 550 650 727°C Temperature (°C) 0.1s 1s 10s 100s 1000s 10⁴s Time (log scale, seconds) Ms A1 Plain carbon (no alloy) Pearlite (alloy + Mo) Bainite (alloy) Mo ‘Bay’ Neither pearlite nor bainite forms here → Martempering zone Austempering hold (isothermal bainite) Martempering (soak above Ms in bay) M forms Plain carbon (Ps/Bs, reference) Alloy + Mo pearlite start (shifted right) Alloy bainite start (separated by bay) Austempering path (→ bainite) Martempering path (→ martensite)
Fig. 2 — Comparison of TTT diagrams for plain carbon steel (light grey dashed curves, reference) and an Mo-bearing alloy steel (blue pearlite, purple bainite). The molybdenum addition shifts the pearlite curves far to the right and separates them from the bainite curves, creating the “bay” (amber shaded region). The austempering path (orange) shows: rapid quench through the pearlite nose into the bainite field, isothermal hold until bainite transformation completes (Bf), then air cool. The martempering path (green) shows: rapid quench just above Ms into the bay, hold to equalise temperature, then air cool through Ms to form martensite uniformly. © metallurgyzone.com

TTT vs CCT Diagrams: The Practical Distinction

The TTT diagram is constructed under perfectly isothermal conditions — a theoretical ideal that is never exactly achieved in industrial practice, where parts cool continuously from austenitising temperature to ambient. The CCT (Continuous Cooling Transformation) diagram is the practical counterpart: it maps the transformation products formed at different constant cooling rates through the transformation temperature range.

Key relationship between TTT and CCT: CCT curves are always displaced to longer times and lower temperatures compared to the corresponding TTT curves. This is because during continuous cooling, the steel spends progressively shorter time at each temperature as it moves through the transformation range — the effective time at any temperature is less than the isothermal holding time would be. The magnitude of the displacement depends on the cooling rate and the shape of the specific TTT curves. For the pearlite reaction: CCT pearlite nose is shifted approximately 50–100°C lower and 2–10× longer in time compared to TTT.
Feature TTT Diagram CCT Diagram
ConditionsInstantaneous quench to fixed T; hold isothermallyContinuous cooling at different rates from austenitising T
Curve position (vs. TTT)Reference (earlier in time at higher T)Shifted right + down (longer time, lower T)
Primary useAustempering and martempering design; theoretical analysisQuench process design; normalising; annealing
Martensite representationHorizontal Ms and Mf linesMs and Mf lines; martensite fraction contours (diagonal)
Data sourceDilatometry at fixed temperature; metallographyDilatometry at controlled cooling rates; metallography
PracticalityRequires knowledge of exact cooling curve for applicationDirectly applicable to quench rate selection for a section

For designing quench processes, selecting quenchant media, or predicting microstructure in different positions of a large forging, the CCT diagram is the more directly applicable tool. For the full treatment of CCT diagram construction and cooling curve overlay, see the CCT Diagram guide. For the underlying austenite microstructure from which all transformations begin, see the Austenite in Steel article.

Prior Austenite Grain Size: Effect on TTT Kinetics

Prior austenite grain size (PAGS) has a significant and often overlooked effect on TTT diagram position. Because pearlite and bainite both nucleate preferentially at austenite grain boundaries, the number of nucleation sites per unit volume is inversely proportional to grain size. A finer grain (higher ASTM number) means:

  • More nucleation sites → higher nucleation rate → faster overall transformation → C-curves shift slightly to the left (shorter times).
  • Worse hardenability: harder to avoid pearlite nose in a given section size.
  • Better toughness: finer grain gives better impact resistance via the Hall-Petch relationship.

TTT diagrams published by atlas sources (ASM Boyer, Verein Deutscher Eisenhüttenleute) specify the grain size at which they were determined. Using a diagram determined at ASTM grain size 7 for a steel that was actually austenitised to ASTM 3 (coarser) will overestimate the speed of transformation and may lead to incorrect quench selection. For safety-critical parts, always verify the actual PAGS matches the conditions used to generate the TTT data. For more on grain size measurement and its mechanical significance, see Grain Boundaries.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a TTT diagram and how does it differ from a CCT diagram?
A TTT (Time-Temperature-Transformation) diagram maps austenite decomposition kinetics under isothermal (constant temperature) conditions — the steel is quenched instantaneously to a fixed temperature and held there. It shows C-shaped curves for pearlite and bainite transformation start and finish times, and horizontal lines for the athermal Ms and Mf temperatures. A CCT (Continuous Cooling Transformation) diagram instead maps transformations during continuous cooling at different rates, which corresponds to actual industrial heat treatment operations. CCT curves are always displaced to longer times and lower temperatures than the corresponding TTT curves because continuous cooling allows progressively less time at each temperature. TTT is used for designing austempering and martempering; CCT for quench process selection.
Why is the transformation curve C-shaped on a TTT diagram?
The C-shape results from two opposing temperature-dependent factors governing transformation kinetics. Near A1 (small undercooling), the thermodynamic driving force ΔG is small, nucleation barriers are large, and transformation is slow despite high diffusivity. Near Ms (large undercooling), the driving force is large but diffusivity approaches zero, also making transformation very slow. At intermediate temperatures — the nose — both factors are sufficiently favourable to maximise the overall transformation rate. On a log-time scale, the resulting curve is C-shaped, with the nose representing the minimum time for transformation onset. For eutectoid steel, the pearlite nose is at approximately 550°C and ~1 second.
What does the Ms temperature mean and what factors control it?
Ms (martensite start) is the temperature below which austenite begins transforming diffusionlessly to martensite during continuous cooling. It depends only on austenite composition, not cooling rate. Carbon is the strongest depressant (−423°C/wt% C), followed by Mn (−30.4°C/wt%), Ni (−17.7°C/wt%), Cr (−12.1°C/wt%), and Mo (−7.5°C/wt%). Silicon slightly raises Ms. When Ms falls below ambient temperature in high-alloy or high-carbon steels (e.g., D2 tool steel, Ms < −100°C), retained austenite forms in the quenched structure and sub-zero treatment is required. The Andrews (1965) equation and other empirical formulae are widely used to estimate Ms from composition; the calculator above implements this.
What is the Koistinen-Marburger equation and how is it applied?
The Koistinen-Marburger (K-M) equation quantifies the martensite fraction formed at any temperature below Ms: f_M = 1 − exp[−0.011 × (Ms − T)]. For eutectoid steel (Ms ≈ 230°C) quenched to room temperature (25°C), f_M = 89.5%, leaving 10.5% retained austenite. To reach <2% retained austenite requires quenching to approximately −80°C. The K-M equation is used to specify sub-zero treatment requirements for precision tools, bearing rings, and gauge blocks. Sub-zero treatment must be applied immediately after quenching, before tempering, because tempering stabilises the retained austenite against further transformation.
How does austempering work and when is it preferred over quench-and-temper?
Austempering quenches austenitised steel rapidly through the pearlite nose into the bainite temperature range (typically 250–450°C), holds isothermally until bainite transformation is complete (Bf on the TTT diagram), then air cools. The result is a fully bainitic microstructure. Austempering is preferred when: (1) toughness at high hardness is critical — lower bainite at 45–58 HRC gives higher KIC than tempered martensite at equivalent hardness; (2) distortion must be minimised — no martensitic volume change discontinuity; (3) the section is thin enough that the quench rate at the core can beat the pearlite nose (typically <12–15 mm for plain carbon steels; up to 50–75 mm for Mn-Mo-Ni alloy steels). Typical applications: springs, automotive stampings, thin gears, fasteners.
How do alloying elements shift the TTT diagram and why does this matter for hardenability?
Most alloying elements (Mn, Cr, Mo, Ni, B) shift the pearlite and/or bainite C-curves to longer times (right on the TTT diagram), increasing the time available to cool through the transformation region without forming pearlite or bainite. This is hardenability — the ability to produce martensite in thick sections. Molybdenum specifically retards pearlite far more than bainite, creating a “bay” between the two C-curves useful for martempering. Boron at 0.001–0.003 wt% dramatically and specifically retards pearlite grain-boundary nucleation with negligible effect on bainite, providing maximum hardenability improvement at minimal cost. The practical consequence: alloy steels can be oil-quenched or air-cooled to produce full martensite in sections that would require water quenching (with attendant cracking risk) in plain carbon steel.
What is the critical cooling rate (CCR) and how is it determined from the TTT diagram?
The critical cooling rate (CCR) is the minimum cooling rate in °C/s that avoids the pearlite and bainite C-curve noses entirely, producing 100% martensite. On the TTT diagram it is the cooling curve from the austenitising temperature that is tangent to the pearlite start (Ps) nose without intersecting it. For eutectoid plain carbon steel, CCR ≈ 140°C/s — achievable only by water quenching thin sections. For 4140 alloy steel, CCR ≈ 30°C/s — oil quenching of moderate sections. For H13 tool steel, CCR ≈ 1°C/s — air quenching suffices for any section. A lower CCR means the steel can be fully hardened in thicker sections with less aggressive quenchants, reducing distortion and cracking risk.
Why does prior austenite grain size affect the TTT diagram?
Prior austenite grain size (PAGS) affects TTT kinetics because pearlite and bainite nucleate preferentially at austenite grain boundaries. Finer grains (higher ASTM number) mean more grain boundary area per unit volume, providing more nucleation sites and accelerating transformation, shifting C-curves slightly to the left (shorter times). This slightly impairs hardenability but improves toughness via Hall-Petch. Steels austenitised at higher temperatures (coarser grains, fewer nucleation sites) show better hardenability — but at the cost of reduced toughness. TTT atlas diagrams always specify the grain size used; applying a diagram from ASTM 7 grain size to a steel austenitised to ASTM 3 will underestimate the actual transformation times, potentially leading to incomplete hardening.

Recommended References

ASM Handbook Vol. 4A: Steel Heat Treating Fundamentals and Processes
The definitive reference for TTT and CCT diagram construction, austempering, martempering, hardenability testing, and heat treatment process design for all engineering steels.
View on Amazon
Steels: Microstructure and Properties — Bhadeshia & Honeycombe (4th Ed.)
Graduate-level text with rigorous thermodynamic and kinetic treatment of TTT diagrams, bainite, martensite, and the effects of alloying on transformation kinetics.
View on Amazon
Atlas of Isothermal Transformation and Cooling Transformation Diagrams — Boyer (ASM)
The standard reference atlas of experimentally determined TTT and CCT diagrams for hundreds of AISI/SAE steels, with composition, grain size, and hardness data.
View on Amazon
Steels: Processing, Structure, and Performance — Krauss (2nd Ed.)
Comprehensive treatment of steel microstructures and their processing origins, including detailed coverage of TTT/CCT diagrams, hardenability, and heat treatment selection.
View on Amazon

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Iron-Carbon Phase Diagram — Complete Guide with All Zones, Lines and Points Explained
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CCT Diagram vs TTT Diagram — Reading Continuous Cooling Transformation Diagrams