Course: Materials Technology
Course: Materials Technology
Course: Materials Technology
HEAT TREATMENT
BULK SURFACE
THERMO-
ANNEALING NORMALIZING HARDENING THERMAL
CHEMICAL
Flame
Carburizing
Full Annealing Induction
TEMPERING Nitriding
Recrystallization Annealing LASER
Cyaniding
•In hypo-eutectoid steels normalizing is done 50⁰C above the annealing temperature 50 ⁰C .
• In hyper-eutectoid steels normalizing done above Acm → due to faster cooling cementite does
not form a continuous film along GB.
Annealed Vs Normalized
Annealed Normalised
Less hardness, tensile strength and toughness Slightly more hardness, tensile strength and
toughness
Pearlite is coarse and usually gets resolved by the Pearlite is fine and usually appears unresolved
optical microscope with optical microscope
Grain size distribution is more uniform Grain size distribution is slightly less uniform
Figure (a) The unit cell of BCT martensite is related to the FCC austenite unit cell. (b) As the
percentage of carbon increases, more interstitial sites are filled by the carbon atoms and the
tetragonal structure of the martensite becomes more pronounced.
Stages of tempering
•The overlapping changes, which occur when high carbon martensite is tempered, are
divided into four stages.
First stage
Second stage
Third stage
Fourth stage or Secondary hardening
•Induction hardening may be used for local surface heat treatment. Generally, it is used to surface
harden crank shafts, cam shafts, gears, crank pins and axles. In this process, heating of the
component is achieved by electromagnetic induction.
• Here, an alternating current of high frequency passes through an induction coil enclosing the
steel part to be heat treated. The induced emf heats the steel.
•The depth up to which the heat penetrates and rises the temperature above A3 is inversely
proportional to the square root of the AC frequency.
• Correspondingly, the hardened depth decreases with increasing frequency in induction
hardening, the heating time is usually a few seconds. Immediately after heating water jets are
activated to quench the surface . Martensite is produced at the surface, making it hard and wear
resistant. The microstructure of the core remains unaltered.
•Suitable for mass production of articles of uniform cross section.
Laser Hardening
• Laser hardening treatment is widely used to harden localized areas of steel and cast iron
machine components. This process is sometimes referred to as laser transformation hardening to
differentiate it from laser surface melting phenomena.
• There is no chemistry change produced by laser transformation hardening, and the process, like
induction and flame hardening, provides an effective technique to harden ferrous materials
selectively.
• As laser beams are of high intensity, a lens is used to reduce the intensity by producing a
defocused spot of size ranging from 0.5 to 25 mm. proper control of energy input is necessary to
avoid melting.
• Laser transformation hardening produces thin surface zones that are heated and cooled very
rapidly, resulting in very fine Martensitic microstructures, even in steels with relatively low
hardenability. High hardness and good wear resistance with less distortion result from this
process.
• Laser hardening has the advantage of precise control over the area to be hardened, an ability to
harden reentrant surfaces, very high speed of hardening and no separate quenching step (the
quench is effected by the mass of the unheated material).
• The disadvantage is that the hardening is shallower than in induction and flame hardening.
Figure 4.6 Square laser beam with uniform power density
on a flat plate
Electron Beam (EB) Hardening
•This process is used for hardening those components which cannot be induction hardened because of
associated distortion. Automatic transmission clutch cams (SAE 5060 steel) are hardened by this processes.
• Electron Beam (EB) hardening is like laser treatment, is used to harden the surfaces of steels. The EB heat
treating process uses a concentrated beam of high-velocity electrons as an energy source to heat selected surface
areas of ferrous parts. Electrons are accelerated and are formed into a directed beam by an EB gun.
• After exiting the gun, the beam passes through a focus coil, which precisely controls beam density levels (spot
size) at the work piece surface and then passes through a deflection coil.
• To produce an electron beam, a high vacuum of 10-5 torr is needed in the region where the electrons are
emitted and accelerated. This vacuum environment protects the emitter from oxidizing and avoids scattering of
the electrons while they are still traveling at a relatively low velocity.
• Like laser beam hardening, the EB process eliminates the need for quenchants but requires a sufficient work
piece mass to permit self quenching.
• A mass of up to eight times that of the volume to be EB hardened is required around and beneath the heated
surfaces. Electron beam hardening does not require energy absorbing coatings, as does laser beam hardening.
• Normally, case depth up to 0.75 mm can be achieved by this method. A minicomputer is used to control
voltage, current, beam time and focus.
Themochemical Treatment
Carburizing
•Carburizing is the most widely used method of surface hardening. Here, the surface layers of a low carbon
steel (<0.25) is enriched with carbon up to 0.8-1.0%. The source of carbon may be a solid medium, a liquid
or a gas.
• In all cases, the carbon enters the steel at the surface and diffuses into the steel as a function of time at an
elevated temperature. Carburizing is done at 920-950°C. at this temperature the following reaction takes
place
where Fe(c) represents carbon dissolved in austenite. The rate of diffusion of carbon in austenite, at a given
temperature is dependent upon the diffusion coefficient and the carbon concentration gradient.
•The carburizing equation is reversible and may proceed to the left, removing
carbon from the surface layer if the steel is heated in an atmosphere containing carbon dioxide (CO2). This
is called decarburization.
• Decarburization may be prevented by using an endothermic gas atmosphere in the furnace to protect the
surface of the steel from oxygen, carbon dioxide and water vapor. An endothermic gas atmosphere is
prepared by reacting relatively rich mixtures of air and hydrocarbon gas (usually natural gas) in an
externally heated generator in the presence of a nickel catalyst.
• Carburizing can be done by Pack carburizing, Liquid carburizing, Gas carburizing and vacuum
carburizing.
Pack Carburizing
•This method of carburizing is also known as solid carburizing.
•In this process, steel components to be heat treated are packed with 80% granular coal and 20%
BaCO3 as energizer in heat resistant boxes and heated at 930°C in furnace for a specific time which
depends on the case depth required.
• Such a high temperature in furnace helps in absorption of carbon at the outer layer. The following
reactions takes place:
i. Energizer decomposes to give CO gas to the steel surface
BaCO3 → BaO +CO2
CO2 + C → 2CO
ii. Carbon monoxide reacts with the surface of steel :
iii. Diffusion of carbon into steel
2CO + Fe → Fe(c) +CO2
iv. CO2 formed in step (ii) reacts with “C” in the coal
CO2 + C → 2CO
•For a given steel at a given temperature, the depth of penetration is dependent on diffusion and can be
related to the time t by the equation :
casedepth = k t Where k is constant
•Generally, carburizing time varies from 6 hours to 8 hours, and case depth obtained varies from 1 mm
to 2 mm.
Liquid Carburizing
•It is also popularly known as salt bath carburizing. In this process, carburizing occurs through molten
cyanide (CN) in low carbon steel cast pot type furnace heated by oil or gas.
•Bath temperature is maintained between 815°C and 900°C.
• The life of pot depends on quality of material, operating temperature and mode of operation, viz.
whether it is continuous or intermittent. Continuous and automatic processes give good end results.
• The bath surface is covered with graphite or coal to reduce radiation losses and excessive
decomposition of cyanide.
• Different salt mixtures used in this processes are named according to their carbon potential activity.
Besides sodium or potassium cyanide, the bath contains (i) Sodium and potassium chloride (ii) Barium
chloride which acts as an activator.
BaCl2 + 2NaCN → Ba(CN)2 + NaCl2
Ba(CN)2 + Fe → Fe(c) + BaCN2
• Some beneficial nitrogen diffusion may also take place through oxidation of CN to CNO. In liquid
carburizing, heating time is short and heat transfer is rapid. There is complete uniformity of the
carburized layer in the component.
• This process gives a thin and clean hardened layer of ~0.08mm thick.
Gas Carburizing
•Carried out in retort type, sealed quench type, or continuous pusher type furnaces. These furnaces
are either gas fired or are heated electrically. Gas carburizing temperature varies from 870°C to
950°C.
• Gas atmosphere for carburizing is produced from liquid (methanol, isopropanol) or gaseous
hydrocarbons (propane and methane). An endothermic gas generator is used to supply endothermic
gas.
• A mixture of propane or methane with air is cracked in hot retort of an endogas generator to form
carrier gas, whose dew point is adjusted at about +4°C by proper gas/air ratio. The approximate
composition of this gas is as follows.
•One of the recent developments is to destroy cyanate and the small percentage of cyanide in the
drag-out salt. This is achieved by quenching in oxidizing quenching (cooling) salt. Such a treatment
eliminates the need for neutralization plant.
• This process can be used for any ferrous material; the time taken for treatment is short.
•However, it is not suitable for very large objects and odd shaped components.
• Limitation of the processes is that the typical treated layers are very thin and nitro-carburizing
atmospheres/salts are difficult to handle safety
Boronizing
• Boronizing is one of the recent methods of surface hardening, which may be applied to any ferrous
material but is generally adopted for carbon steels and tool steels.
• In the case of pack process, the components are packed in heat resistant boxes with mixtures of
granules or paste of boron carbide or other boron compounds with addition of activators and diluents
at 900-1000°C.
• Boron diffuses inwards and iron borides (FeB and Fe2B) layers are formed. On the outer surface,
FeB phase forms, While in the interior, Fe2B phase is formed. FeB phase is more brittle and is not
desirable.
• Higher temperatures, longer treatment times and high alloy steels favour the formation of FeB phase.
The boride layers are very hard. The hardness of boride layers on steel ranges between 1500 and 2100
VHN.
• Boride layer depths range from 0.012 to 0.127 mm, depending on material and application.
•The treatment time required for a case depth of 0.15 mm is 6hours at about 900°C. Thick layers (up
to 0.127 mm) – for abrasive wear Thin layer (up to 0.025 mm) – for adhesive wear and friction
reduction
• Boronizing increases tool and mold life by improving resistance to abrasive, sliding and adhesive
wear. It reduces the use of lubrication as have low coefficient of friction. But highprocess temperature
may lead to the distortion of the component. Moreover, the component shows poor fatigue and
corrosion resistance.
Chromizing
• Like Boronizing process, Chromizing is also used for surface hardening of both carbon and tool
steels.
• There are two basic types of chromizing : Pack chromizing and gaseous chromizing. The components
to be chromized are packed with fine chromium powder and additives.
• A typical chromizing mixture consists of 60% Cr or ferro chrome (with carbon content not exceeding
0.1%), 0.2% ammonium iodide, and 39% kaolin powder.
• Diffusion of chromium takes place at 900-1020°C, and chromium carbide is formed on the surface of
steel. The treatment time needed for achieving a case depth of 0.02-0.04 mm is 12 hours at 900-
1020°C. Hardness of chromium carbide layer is about 1500 VHN
• HARD CHROMIZING : If the steel, which to be chromized, contains enough carbon (minimum
0.35%), a corrosion and wear resistant chromium layer will be formed on the surface of the work-
piece during the chromizing treatment.
• SOFT CHROMIZING : On steel, with low carbon content (<0.35%), a chromium carbide layer
cannot be formed. Instead a chromium diffusion layer builds up during the chromizing process which
can reach up to 200μm in thickness and a chromium content of up to 35%. The high chromium content
endows the work piece with an excellent resistance against corrosion and oxidation while maintaining
its ductility
• Chromizing leads to excellent corrosion resistance under a variety of severe conditions.
•High temperature oxidation resistance is also improved significantly. Components ma undergo
bending and flanging operations without spalling. Hardness of chromium carbide layer is about
1500VHN.
Precipitation hardening
•Pure FCC metals such as Al have low yield strengths because the stress required to move a
dislocation is small. One method of strengthening an alloy is through precipitation reactions.
Precipitation hardening or age hardening a is the process of hardening or strengthening of an alloy by
precipitating finely dispersed precipitates of the solute in a supersaturated matrix. The process does
this by producing uniformly dispersed particles within a metal's grain structure that help hinder motion
and thereby strengthen it— particularly if the metal is malleable.
•Occurs by forming small precipitates within the initial phase .
•How the precipitates will evenly form throughout the grains is in secondary phase.
precipitates
Three steps to precipitation hardening
•In order for an alloy system to be able to be precipitation strengthened, there must be a terminal
solid solution that has a decreasing solid solubility as the temperature decreases. The precipitation-
hardening process involves three basic steps:
54
Solution Heat Treating
•Solution heat treatment: To solute atoms A dissolved to form a single-phase () solution.
• The first step is the solution heat treatment or homogenization. Figure 1 illustrates this
phenomenon. During this step, an alloy of composition C₀ is heated to a temperature T₀, between the
solvus and solidus temperatures and soaked there until all of the solute dissolves into the α phase
and a uniform solid‐solution structure is produced.
Quenching
•The second step is Quenching: The sample is rapidly cooled to a lower temperature, T₁, usually room
temperature, and the cooling medium is usually water at room temperature. During quenching, the
solute is not immediately able to diffuse out of a phase and the alloy is said to be supersaturated. The
rationale behind the quenching process is to preserve the uniform solid solution structure of the alloy
below the homogenization temperature i.e. Equilibrium structure is +, but limited diffusion does
not allow to form.
Precipitation Heat Treatment
•The final step in the precipitation hardening process is aging. It is the process of precipitating
incoherent precipitates from a supersaturated solid solution.
• Supersaturated solution heated to T2 where diffusion is appreciable - phase starts to form finely
dispersed particles: ageing.
•When aging occurs at room temperature, it is called natural aging. Aging above room temperature is
called artificial aging.
•Temperature for step three is less than step one so that the correct precipitate form inside the initial
grains without overtaking it.
•After solution heat treatment during precipitation hardening process it is the tensile strength and
hardness are aged to a certain point and after that point if the process isn’t stopped they will go and
they will become over aged.
Precipitation Heat Treatment contd..
•With extended aging, the strength and hardness will go up, until reaching maximum, then they both
will start to decrease.
•Maintained and in solution heat treating temperature until it becomes one solution then room
temperature then it is brought up to a secondary temperature which is less than the first until it
reaches the desired aging and then cooled to room temperature.
Microstructural development with aging time
Examples of materials that use precipitation hardening
•The internal wing structure on Boeing 767
•Aluminium strengthening
•Stainless steel 17-4PH