Wall Colmonoy - Properties of Hard Surfacing Alloy Colmonoy 88 - July 2019
Wall Colmonoy - Properties of Hard Surfacing Alloy Colmonoy 88 - July 2019
Wall Colmonoy - Properties of Hard Surfacing Alloy Colmonoy 88 - July 2019
July 2019
Authors:
Michael Weinstein, Technical Services Manager, USA
BS, Metallurgical Engineering
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Coatings/Deposits of Colmonoy® 88 were applied
to specimens of approximately 25 x 75mm and were
prepared using each process under evaluation.
Approximate deposition rates are shown in Figure 2.
Approximate
Alloy Deposit
Deposition Comments
Type
Rate (g/min)
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Background Given the differing structures for the fused and welded
Colmonoy 88 powder was developed in the 1980’s
® overlays significant differences in ASTM G65 volume
(Reference US Patent No. 5,141,571). Since its’ losses are not apparent. The expectation is that due to
inception the powder has been made available in the the test conditions and size of the abrasive sand, the
additional particle size distributions suitable for use in test does not reflect results dependent on the size of
the thermal spray and welding processes used for this the hard phases present. The grain size of the sand is
study. Additionally, rod and wire products were also approximately 3 times larger than the size of the hard
developed. Five of the six processes used yielded the phases present. One may expect to see different results
expected results. if the abrasive were smaller than 50 or 25 microns.
It was expected that the microstructure of the The HVOF overlay underwent a significantly different
overlays would correlate to the wear test volume loss. thermal profile during application than did the
Metallographic examination does not lead to a direct others. Much of the microstructural characteristics
correlation. remain similar to those found in the atomized powder
feedstock. Since the degree of melting did not take
Figure 6 shows micrographs of the overlays by process. place in the same time frame as the other processes the
The specimens were etched with Marbles reagent results indicate that the wear resistance of Colmonoy®
to make the various phases/structures more easily 88 relies on precipitation of hard phases formed on
visible. heating near to or above the liquidus temperature of
the alloy.
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Figure 7 shows a typical thermal analysis plot of heat flow versus temperature. This plot indicates phase changes
including solidus/liquidus temperatures as well as phase formation on cooling during solidification.
Figure 7. Thermal analysis trace by Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC) for Colmonoy® 88. Heating (bottom) and Cooling (top). Exothermic
reactions peak upward, Endothermic reaction peak downward.
Although the wear test results (excluding HVOF) were not widely divergent we can see that temperature and time
influence microstructure. Thus, it should be noted that sample preparation on small test specimens may not
be representative of the process when the actual parts for service are made (ie. preheat & temperature & time
factors). The specimens prepared for this study were all nominally 25mm wide x 75mm long x 19mm thick.
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Summary
Colmonoy® 88 when fused or welded, exhibits wear properties which are superior to hardened D-2 to steel
under the G65 test conditions. The HVOF coating is nearly equivalent to normalized AISI 1090 steel under these
conditions.
Under the ASTM G65 wear conditions the economics by process can be ranked based on the gas and electric and
feedstock costs. Normalizing to the two-layer PTA weld overlay for a 1m2 surface.
HVOF 2690
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References
[1] ASM Metals Handbook Vol. 5, Surface Engineering, published 1994.
[2] American Society of Testing and Materials; Standard Method for Measuring Abrasion Using the Dry Sand/
Rubber Wheel Apparatus; ASTM G65-16.
[3] Evaluation of ASTM G65 Abrasive – Spanning 13 years of Sand; A. Doering, D. Danks, & M. J. Scott; Wear and
Friction Resources, Houston Texas.
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Copyright © 2019 by Wall Colmonoy Corporation. All rights reserved.
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