Not that I know of/not really.
To possibly qualify that statement I will suggest the idea that beyond, and even more important than, steel type in nearly all knife making arenas, heat treatment is far more important than steel type.
It's what you DO with the steel you have - not what TYPE of steel you have.
For example a quote from a long-time and famous sword maker, Roman Landes, he often says, "Geometry cuts. Heat treatment determines how long".
Notice that he didn't say steel type or alloy, but "geometry".
And that's the truth.
A fabulous 'designer' steel properly hardened and tempered, but ground and shaped poorly will do a horrible job of cutting. Conversely, I can grind a piece of mild steel - that will not harden at all - sharp enough to cut a couple times. But then it's done.
I recently made a post about flexing steel.
Flex has nothing to do with hardness - nothing. What determines how a steel flexes is its GEOMETRY. Hardened and unhardened steel of the same geometry flex exactly the same every time. What the heat treatment determines is where the unhardened blade will take a set and not return to straight.
Regardless of steel type.
There are many, many types of simple carbon steels that will perform exceedingly well as a Bowie, provided the blade smith knew what he was doing metalurgically and shape the blade profile and cutting edge with the cutting tasks in mind.