Austenite

Named for Sir W.C. Roberts Austen this is a solid solution structure in which gamma iron is the solvent with carbon or iron carbide as the solute.
Austenite is the state of iron/carbon that most of the structures (martensite, pearlite, bainite etc...) used in bladesmithing are derived from.
Upon heating to the temperature designated ac1 alpha iron makes the allotropic shift from Body centered cubic to face centered cubic gamma iron. Gamma iron is capable of holding much more carbon in solution and begins to accept carbon into the iron atomic matrix.

Holding higher amounts of carbon in solution in the FCC configuration causes austenite to be unstable at temperatures below ar1. Upon slow cooling carbon will diffuse to form pearlite from the parent austenite. If rapidly cooled austenite will be unable to diffuse carbon sufficiently enough to form pearlite and the result will be martensite or bainite depending upon the rate of cooling. In many ways austenite is the parent of the other microstructures, not only from the standpoint that the other structures arise from its decomposition but also that it provides the framework for some of their characteristics. Austenite leaves its affects and "finger print" in the form of the austenite grain boundary. Shape and size of the austenite grain will determine the rates of transformation through points of nucleation, or "toe holds" for transformations to begin. And this in turn will affect the formation of new austenite upon reheating to ac1. Steel with larger austenite grains tends to harden more deeply due to the reduction of nucleation points for the diffusion of pearlite to begin. The drawback is that larger grains make steel much more weak and brittle. For bladesmithing the greater of these two evils is the brittleness so large grains and grain growth is to be avoided whenever possible. Austenite grain growth occurs when the steel is heated beyond ac1 and acm (the point at which the extra cementite is dissolved), and increases with temperature. The larger austenite grains will grow at the expense of the smaller grains. So time at these elevated temperatures should be carefully watched and kept to a minimum. When heating a steel to ac1 the shift to gamma iron will allow any pearlite to be dissolved and form new austenite grains. These new grains will be slightly finer and within the previous boundaries due to increased nucleation. As temperature increases the proeutectoid ferrite (if the steel is hypoeutectoid) or proeutectoid cementite (if the steel is hypereutectoid) will be dissolved until ac3 or acm and there is complete austenite.

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