Abstract
Advancing magnetic field-assisted processing, as an energy-efficient method for tailoring steel microstructures, requires a thorough understanding of how the high magnetic field impacts microstructural evolution, particularly its effect on prior austenite grain structures. The current investigation of a near-eutectoid composition, Fe-C alloy, uses electron backscatter diffraction to examine the morphology and orientation of martensite and pearlite microstructures, and to reconstruct the parent austenite microstructures present during equivalent heating under varied magnetic field strengths (0-T, 2-T, 5-T, and 9-T). It was observed that the magnetic field has a negligible effect on martensite lath/block width, slightly decreases prior austenite grain size, and increases the fraction of austenite grains with annealing twins. Additionally, the magnetic field increases the phase fraction of proeutectoid ferrite but has a negligible effect on pearlite block size and the distribution of boundary misorientation angles. No preferred texture was induced by the magnetic field, regardless of the applied field direction, in the proeutectoid ferrite phase or the martensite and prior austenite microstructures. The observed results contradict previous literature, and the differences are discussed.