This document discusses surface hardening techniques. It states that heavy cross sections cannot be cooled quickly enough to produce a uniformly martensitic structure throughout, resulting in a softer unhardened core. It discusses various case hardening techniques like pack carburizing, liquid bath, and gas carburizing to increase the hardness of surfaces. It also covers nitriding, induction hardening, flame hardening, and other surface hardening methods like boronizing and carbonitriding. Heat treatment furnaces and protection of surfaces using metallic coatings is also summarized.
This presentation gives a brief introduction to chemical heat treatment of steels and surface hardening techniques
Keywords: Carburising, Nitriding, Carbonitriding, Flame hardening, Laser hardening, Induction hardening
This presentation gives a brief introduction to chemical heat treatment of steels and surface hardening techniques
Keywords: Carburising, Nitriding, Carbonitriding, Flame hardening, Laser hardening, Induction hardening
In their simplest form, steels are alloys of Iron (Fe) and Carbon (C). The Fe-C phase diagram is a fairly complex one, but we will only consider the steel and cast iron part of the diagram, up to 6.67% Carbon
Carburzing and Different Types of CarburzingMelwin Dmello
This Presentation covers the Basic concepts of Carburzing and Different Types of Carburzing in a easy version. For more information, please refer the books mentioned in the references slide.... Thank you
this ppt is useful for understanding the concept of heat treatment process in steel.
it gives the idea about the various stages of heat treatment process in details
In their simplest form, steels are alloys of Iron (Fe) and Carbon (C). The Fe-C phase diagram is a fairly complex one, but we will only consider the steel and cast iron part of the diagram, up to 6.67% Carbon
Carburzing and Different Types of CarburzingMelwin Dmello
This Presentation covers the Basic concepts of Carburzing and Different Types of Carburzing in a easy version. For more information, please refer the books mentioned in the references slide.... Thank you
this ppt is useful for understanding the concept of heat treatment process in steel.
it gives the idea about the various stages of heat treatment process in details
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what is laser hardening
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This presentation provides an introduction into the basics of heat treating, primarily steel alloys. Heat treat processes for strengthening steel, or through hardening, using quench and temper, martempering, and austempering will be introduced and explained using the iron-carbon phase diagram and time-temperature-transformation diagrams to help understand the transformations occurring.
Precipitation hardening techniques will be introduced, which apply to one group of stainless steels, aluminum alloys and high performance materials. Common surface hardening techniques such as case hardening and carburizing will also be discussed. Various processes for reducing strength, or softening steel, will be presented. Preheat and post-heat treatments applied during welding will also be briefly discussed.
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1. SURFACE HARDENING
HEAVY CROSS SECTION - IMPOSSIBLE TO COOL QUICKLY TO PRODUCE
A UNIFORMLY MARTENSITIC STRUCTURE THROUGHOUT
• A SOFT UNHARDENED CORE DUE TO RELATIVELY SLOW COOLING RATE.
CORE WITH FINE PEARLITE, SURFACE MARTENSITIC-
CALLED MASS EFFECT OF HEAT TREATMENT
• 0.1% C – TOUGH & SOFT; 0.8% C – HARD & BRITTLE
CERTAIN APPLICATIONS WHERE CORE AND SURFACE SHALL HAVE
DIFFERENT PROPERTIES. Eg:
• Cam, Gears, Shafts to have hard and wear resistant surfaces,
but TOUGH, shock resistant cores
• HARDNESS- TOUGHNESS- MALLEABILITY- [COMPRESSION ](eg: rolling,
forging)- DUCTILITY- [TENSION ](eg: wires drawn)
2. • Carbon or Nitrogen to penetrate to some
depth for hardness to increase on surface
• Flame or Induction hardening for localised
purposes
• CASE HARDENING – eg; Wrought Iron to
steel by Cementation
• Carbon diffused into Iron (of Fe3C structure)
3. CASE HARDENING
• Solid, Liquid or Gaseous medium
• Release carbon at surface , absorb
interstitially to steel- By DIFFUSION
• DEPTH DERIVED BY SECOND LAW
5. FIRST LAW
dn/dt = no. of moles of B atoms crossing per unit time
D= Diffusion coefficient
A= Planar area
dc/dx= concentration gradient
If J = flux flow / unit area per unit time,
6. PACK CARBURISING
Packing work in 25 Cr, 20 Ni heat resisting steel
boxes with 50 mm gap with carburising
material.
Heated slowly to 850 – 9250
C, maintained for 8 hrs
according to depth needed.
Temperature
CarburisingTime
Depth of case
7. • CHARCOAL
WITH BARIUM CARBONATE AS
ENERGISER (10 to 15%). Process depends
on presence of CO
2C + O 2 2 CO
At surface, releases C atoms
2CO CO2 + C
C dissolved interstitially at surface of steel.
Ba CO3 Ba O + CO2
CO2 + C 2CO
8. LIQUID BATH
• Mixture of salts of Sodium Cyanide, Sodium
carbonate, Sodium/barium Chloride
• Melted in pots to 870- 9500
C, work immersed
for 5 min to 1 hour
• Then basket quenched- hard and clean
surface
• For shallow- 0.1 to 0.25 ,mm; for small parts
9. GAS CARBURISING
• In batch type or continuous furnaces.
• Far widely used
• Clean compact plant
• Heated to 9000
C for 3 to 4 hours
• Hydrocarbons methane and propane partly
burnt in furnace, diluted with carrier gas to
get required carbon POTENTIAL ( ie
carbon content maintained in equilibrium
in the surface film- of 0.8% desirable)
10. • After carburising, HT necessary to strengthen
and toughen the core.
• Hardens case too.
11. NITRIDING
• Resembles Carburising-(interstitial penetration
during heating with nitriding agent)
• Hardness depends on the formation of
hard nitrides
• For alloy steels with Al, Cr, Mo, V (these
form strong nitrides)
12. • Plus points:
• No quenching needed, so cracking /distortion least.
• High surface hardness of 1150 H obtained
• Resistance to fatigue failure good
• Resistance to corrosion good, (on unpolished surface)
• Hardness retained at 5000
C ( in carburising falls near
2000
C)
• Economical for large no. of components
• Clean process, (cyaniding with water rinsing
environmentally not good)
Minus points:
• Initial outlay higher than for case hardening
• Overheating removes hardness completely.
13. INDUCTION HARDENING AND
FLAME HARDENING
• USE OF INDUCTION COILS
•Gas flame derived
•rom acetylene, propane
or natural gas .
•Manually operated
torches
used for small areas or
localised surfaces.
14. LASER HARDENING
• For small, large, surfaces: Locomotive
cylinders
• Close control of process possible, low
distortion, can reach inaccessible regions,
• Capital Cost high, but depth of 2.5 mm
15. • Apart from carburizing and Nitriding,
• CYANIDING
• BORONIZING
• CARBONITRIDING
17. PROTECTION BY METALLIC COATINGS
Protection:
1. Direct- by an unbroken film of corrosion-resistant metal
covering the article.
Eg: tin coatings on steel.
2. Sacrificial- metallic film becomes anodic and dissolves in
preference to cathodic surface beneath.
Methods:
Electroplating, dipping into a bath of molten metal,
spraying/volatilizing the protective metal onto the
surface, Mechanical Cladding.
18. Laminated Object Manufacturing
Profiles of object cross
sections are cut from
paper or other web
material using a laser. The
paper is unwound from a
feed roll onto the stack
and first bonded to the
previous layer using a
heated roller which melts
a plastic coating on the
bottom side of the paper.
The profiles are then
traced by an optics
system that is mounted to
an X-Y stage.
19. • After cutting of the layer is complete, excess paper is
cut away to separate the layer from the web. Waste
paper is wound on a take-up roll. The method is self-
supporting for overhangs and undercuts. Areas of
cross sections which are to be removed in the final
object are heavily cross-hatched with the laser to
facilitate removal. It can be time consuming to
remove extra material for some geometries
• Market segments ranging from concept modeling to
very large objects for architectural applications
22. • MIT Technology Insiderpublish works on research-
principally in microstructural design, with emphasis on the
microstructure-property relationship in engineered materials.
• One area of ongoing research is “grain boundary
engineering,” which allows traditional metals and alloys to be
dramatically improved in terms of cracking, creep, corrosion,
and electro-migration resistance, often by an order of
magnitude. These remarkable property enhancements are
possible through tailoring the grain boundary network,
promoting the development of grain boundaries with “special”
crystallography and properties.
• Studies on the development of these special boundary
networks, the connectivity and percolation behavior of the
grain boundary network, and the mechanical properties of
these highly engineered materials.
23. • Another area of research is nanocrystalline and
amorphous materials. For these unique materials,
conventional knowledge of the structure-property
relationship breaks down and new physics
discovered to explain their unique properties. The
traditional as well as modern methods (such as
nanoindentation) used to probe the microstructure-
property relationships of these materials. Of
particular interest is the transition from a
nanocrystalline to an amorphous structure (which
occurs at grain sizes near ~2 nm) and the manner in
which properties change through this regime.
24. • scanning electron microscopy and
Energy Dispersive X-ray Microanalysis (EDX).
• Eg: 13A plug-
List of Parts
1- Fuse Holder
2- Cover Screw
3- Earth Pin
4- Wire fixing screw
5- Live and Neutral Pins
6- Fuse holder rivet
25. CLADDING
• Mainly in the manufacture of clad sheets- employed
prior to the final manufacturing stages of a
component
• Base metal sandwiched between the pieces of the
coating metal, sandwich then rolled to the required
thickness
• In some, film of protective metal sprayed onto the
base surface & then rolled.
• ALCLAD- Duralumin coated with aluminium (0.01
mm thick)
• MS clad with SS
• But, damage to protective skin during fabrication
27. • , Frederick Carlton Ball (1911-1992) was a
prize fighter who went by the name "California
Gene Tunney".
• Teacher at California College of Arts and
Crafts, Southern Illinois University, the
University of Puget Sound, Mills College,
Oakland and the University of Southern
California,
• Wrote book: 'Decorating Pottery with Clay,
Slip and Glaze'