Publication | Open Access
A microstructure-informatic strategy for Vickers hardness forecast of austenitic steels from experimental data
24
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
EngineeringMechanical EngineeringMaterial SelectionMicrostructural Features ExtractionHigh Strength Low Alloy SteelStructural OptimizationExperimental DataMicrostructure-informatic StrategyMicrostructure-strength RelationshipMicrostructure AnalysisPrincipal Component AnalysisMaterials ScienceMetal FormingMicrostructureMechanical PropertiesMaterial ModelingAlloy DesignAustenitic SteelsMechanical PerformanceVickers HardnessMechanics Of Materials
Accelerating design and development of new materials by establishing process-structure-property (PSP) linkages is one of the core contents of materials science. One of the challenges is how to accurately forecast the property by the features including chemical compositions, experiment conditions, and structure information. In this study, with consistent features in statistics and materials science, we proposed a microstructure-informatic strategy to achieve the goal of accurately predicting Vickers hardness of austenitic steels. Feature engineering including correlations analysis, importance ranking and microstructural features extraction was employed to ensure the most information contained in the features related to the property. Through training and comparing six regression models with different input features, we demonstrated that one of the models inputting microstructural features obtained by two-point statistics combined with principal component analysis (PCA) maintains the highest accuracy (absolute error≤13.63 MPa, relative error≤8.86%) and predictive stability (minimum error range). The excellent generalization ability of this model was validated by eight experimental instances unseen in the original dataset. We believe that our strategy can be used to guide future experiments due to its high precision. Most importantly, the strategy can be generalized to predict other mechanical properties controlled by microstructures in more material systems.
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