Professor Joe Greene Csu, Chico
Professor Joe Greene Csu, Chico
Professor Joe Greene Csu, Chico
MFGT 104
Introduction
Heat treatment refers to heating and cooling operations required to alter the properties of metals, plastics, and ceramics
Changes in a materials properties result from changes made in microstructure of the material.
Steels crystalline structure changes during heat treatment Most metals crystalline structure can not be changed. Room Temp steel is mixture of ferrite and pearlite. (BCC) At elevated temp (1333F), the structure changes to FCC austenite. For slow cool, austenite returns to BCC For fast cool, austenite turns to martensite, Body Centered tetragonal structure, the hardest form of steel.
The larger amount of martensite in steel, the harder Martensite is formed from Pearlite which has an eutectoid composition of 0.77% Carbon Steel that is 100% Pearlite, 1080 steel, will transform into 100% martensite if heated to austenite range and then cooled rapidly Steel that is 50% Pearlite, 1040 steel, is hypoeutectoid and contains less Pearlite, will transform into 50% martensite. 3
Carbon steel of 0.77% carbon (eutectoid- lowest T a single phase can exist before becoming 2). All carbon dissolved into austenite. Austenite- gamma iron. FCC and non-magnetic. Steel must be taken into autenite region for all hardening and softening. When solution cools slowly steel separates into 2 distinct phases, ferrite and cementite. Cementite- very hard and brittle compound, not alloy. Iron is allotropic- can exist in more than one phase.
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is called austenite range Course Pearlite is formed by slowest cooling. Remains at T room Fine Pearlite is formed by slower cooling. Remains at T room Banite is formed by slow cooling. Remains at T room
C
Austenite 800
727C
Liquid, L
1333C
Temp
Ps 50% Pf
1 min
+Fe3C
Eutectic Temp
+
727C
+ Fe3C
+ Fe3C
1 hour
1 day
0.1
10
100
0.77 %C Eutectoid
Composition
Temp
Ps
Pf A
10
+Fe3C
Course pearlite
Fine pearlite
B
1 min
100
C
1 hour
Banite 1 day
Ms Mf
8
Fig 10-16
C
800 600 400 200
0.1
Austenite
727C
+ +Fe3C
Ps
Pf
+Fe3C
1 min
1 10 100
1 hour
Temp
Ps Pf A
1 10
B
1 min
100
C
1 hour
Banite 1 day
Ms Mf
Tempering of Steels
austempering: resembles martempering, except after leveling the temperature at 700F, it is held for a longer period of time while it passes through the Ps and Pf lines.
Bainite is formed which is the region of transformation between the rapid cooling curves for martensite and slower cooling pearlite. Bainite has superior ductility and tougness but inferior hardness and strength versus martensite. Once Bainite is formed, the steel is quenched to room temperature
isothermal quenching and tempering fits somewhere between martempering and austempering.
Steel is harder and stronger than austempering, yet more ductile and stress free than martempering. Structure is combination of bainite and tempered martensite. Metal is heated to autenite range then quenched to about 50% transformation from austenite to martensite. Temperature of 300F is held for a few seconds while remaiing austenite transforms to bainite. 11 Quenched to room temperature
Microstructure is different than pearlite and bainite. of part C Surface Center of part Problem
Surface cools faster than center Can crack Temp
800 600 400 200 0 1 min
1 10 100
Austenite
727C
Ps
Pf
+Fe3C
Tempering
1 hour
1 day
Ms Mf
12
0.1
Tempering of Steels
Rapid drops in temperature causes internal stresses in metals. Tempering is the process of re-heating the metal immediatley after hardening to a temperature below the transformation temperature [700F and 800F] for 1 hour per inch of thickness then cooled to increase the ductility and toughness of steel. Tempering is also called drawing because it draws the hardness from the metal Types of tempering
martempering: part is quenched to a temperature just above the Ms line [between 500F and 600 F]for a few seconds to allow temperature throughout the part to stablilize. Then the part is quenched through the martensitic range to room temperature
Provides more uniform grain structure as it enters martensitic range More stress free
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Precipitation hardening
Small obstacles to dislocation motion can strengthen (harden) a metal. Small second-phase precipitates are effective this way.
Chap 9 illustrated that cooling paths for certain alloy compositions lead to 2ndphase precipitation. Al-Cu system. Fig 10-25 Al-rich end (96% Al) starts in 100 phase and cools to + .with phase precipitating at the boundaries. By quenching and reheating Al-Cu alloy (4.5%Cu). Fig 10-26 A fine dispersion of precipitates forms within the boundaries The precipitates are effective in hindering dislocation motion and increase alloy hardness and strength. Known as precipitation hardeneing
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Annealing is slow cooling from just above the austenite temperature range (50F to 100F above the range) to prevent excessively large grain
Temperature range is different for steels: 0.4% C = 1500F, 0.8% C = 1400F Leaves the steel in its softest possible condition Example, fully annealed Steel with 0.4% Carbon requires 1500F for 1 hour per inch of thickness Temperature is reduced slowly (20F per hour) until it passes the Pf line on the TTT Curve. Takes 2 to 3 days. Softest possible steel with large, uniform grain structure
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Process annealing
Metal is heated to 1050F to 1300F and then cooled. Relieves internal stresses of the metal and gives good malleability.
Speroidizing
Similar to process annealing. Parts are heated below the low transformation temperature (1333F) for 1 to 4 hours and then cooled slowly. The cementite in the steel is speroidized, producing a tougher steel. Used with high-carbon steel to make them machinable. Tool steels are heated above the LTT (1333F) for 1 to 4 hours and cooled. `
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Quenching of Steels
During quenching, there are four separate actions
vapor forming: vapor film forms next to metal as liquid boils. vapor covering: bubbles around metal stick to metal and insulate it. vapor discharge: vapor collapses and explodes off surface (max cool) slow cooling: continues until the metal reaches room temperature.
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Case hardening is used on parts for gear teeeth, cutting wheels, and tools. Flame hardening Induction hardening
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