TRIP steels possess a
microstructure consisting of
austenite with sufficient thermodynamic instability such that transformation to
martensite is achieved during loading or deformation. Many automotive TRIP steels possess retained austenite within a
ferrite matrix, which may also contain hard phases like
bainite and martensite. In the case of these alloys, the high silicon and carbon content of TRIP steels results in significant volume fractions of retained austenite in the final microstructure. TRIP steels use higher quantities of carbon than
dual-phase steels to obtain sufficient carbon content for stabilizing the retained
austenite phase to below ambient temperature. Higher contents of
silicon and/or
aluminium accelerate the
ferrite/
bainite formation. They are also added to avoid formation of
carbide in the
bainite region. For use in naval and marine applications, both martensitic/austenitic and fully austenitic steels have been of interest due to their exhibited large uniform elongation, high strength, and high
fracture toughness. These properties are exhibited because of a deformation-induced martensitic transformation from parent phase (FCC γ austenite) to the product phase (BCC α' martensite). This transformation is dependent on temperature, applied stress, composition, strain rate, and deformation history, among others. ==Metallurgical properties==