martenzitát
Martenzitát is a Hungarian term referring to martensite, a hard, brittle microstructural phase of steel. It is formed by the rapid cooling (quenching) of austenite. Austenite is a high-temperature phase of steel that is stable above a certain temperature. When steel is heated into the austenite range and then cooled quickly, the carbon atoms do not have enough time to diffuse out and form carbides. Instead, they become trapped within the iron lattice, distorting it into a body-centered tetragonal structure. This highly supersaturated solid solution of carbon in iron is known as martensite.
The formation of martensite is a diffusionless transformation, meaning it occurs almost instantaneously as the temperature
Martensite is typically undesirable in its as-quenched state due to its brittleness. Therefore, steel that has