Mergedppt
Mergedppt
Mergedppt
+ Fe3C
3
Production of cast iron
Pig iron, scrap steel, limestone and carbon (coke)
Cupola
Electric arc furnace
Electric induction furnace
Usually sand cast, but can be gravity die cast in
reusable graphite moulds
Not formed, finished by machining
4
Types of cast iron
Grey cast iron - carbon as graphite
White cast iron - carbides, often alloyed
Ductile cast iron
nodular, spheroidal graphite
Malleable cast iron
Compacted graphite cast iron
CG or Vermicular Iron
5
Effect of cooling rate
Slow cooling favours the formation of graphite & low
hardness
Rapid cooling promotes carbides with high hardness
Thick sections cool slowly, while thin sections cool
quickly
Sand moulds cool slowly, but metal chills can be used to
increase cooling rate & promote white iron
6
Effect of composition
A CE over 4.3 (hypereutectic) leads to carbide or graphite
solidifying first & promotes grey cast iron
A CE less than 4.3 (hypoeutectic) leads to austenite
solidifying first & promotes white iron
7
Grey cast iron
Flake graphite in a matrix of pearlite, ferrite or
martensite
Wide range of applications
Low ductility - elongation 0.6%
Grey cast iron forms when
Cooling is slow, as in heavy sections
High silicon or carbon
8
Typical properties
Depend strongly on casting shape & thickness
AS1830 & ASTM A48 specifies properties
Low strength, A48 Class 20, Rm 120 MPa
High carbon, 3.6 to 3.8%
Kish graphite (hypereutectic)
High conductivity, high damping
High strength, A48 Class 60, Rm 410 MPa
Low carbon, (eutectic composition)
9
Graphite form Uniform
Rosette
Superimposed (Kish and normal)
Interdendritic random
Interdendritic preferred orientation
See AS5094 “designation of
microstructure of graphite”
10
Matrix structure
Pearlite or ferrite
Transformation is to ferrite when
Cooling rate is slow
High silicon content
High carbon equivalence
Presence of fine undercooled graphite
11
Properties of grey cast iron
Machineability is excellent
Ductility is low (0.6%), impact resistance low
Damping capacity high
Thermal conductivity high
Dry and normal wear properties excellent
12
Applications
Engines
Cylinder blocks, liners,
Brake drums, clutch plates
Pressure pipe fittings (AS2544)
Machinery beds
Furnace parts, ingot and glass moulds
13
Ductile iron
Inoculation with Ce or Mg or both causes graphite
to form as spherulites, rather than flakes
Also known as spheroidal graphite (SG), and
nodular graphite iron
Far better ductility than grey cast iron
See AS1831
14
Microstructure
Graphite spheres
surrounded by ferrite
Usually some pearlite
May be some cementite
Can be hardened to
martensite by heat
treatment
15
Production
Composition similar to grey cast iron except for
higher purity.
Melt is added to inoculant in ladle.
Magnesium as wire, ingots or pellets is added to
ladle before adding hot iron.
Mg vapour rises through melt, removing sulphur.
16
Verification
Testing is required to ensure nodularisation is
complete.
Microstructural examination
Mechanical testing on standard test bars (ductility)
Ultrasonic testing
17
Properties
Strength higher than grey cast iron
Ductility up to 6% as cast or 20% annealed
Low cost
Simple manufacturing process makes complex shapes
Machineability better than steel
18
Applications
Automotive industry 55% of ductile iron in USA
Crankshafts, front wheel spindle supports, steering
knuckles, disc brake callipers
Pipe and pipe fittings (joined by welding) see
AS2280
19
Malleable iron
Graphite in nodular form
Produced by heat treatment of white cast iron
Graphite nodules are irregular clusters
Similar properties to ductile iron
See AS1832
20
Microstructure
Uniformly dispersed graphite
Ferrite, pearlite or tempered martensite
matrix
Ferritic castings require 2 stage anneal.
Pearlitic castings - 1st stage only
21
Annealing treatments
Ferritic malleable iron
Depends on C and Si
1st stage 2 to 36 hours at 940˚C in a controlled atmosphere
Cool rapidly to 750˚C & hold for 1 to 6 hours
For pearlitic malleable iron
Similar 1st stage above (2 - 36 h at 940˚C)
Cool to 870˚C slowly, then air cool & temper to specification
Harden and temper pearlitic iron for martensitic castings
22
Properties
Similar to ductile iron
Good shock resistance
Good ductility
Good machineability
23
Applications
Similar applications to ductile iron
Malleable iron is better for thinner castings
Ductile iron better for thicker castings >40mm
Vehicle components
Power trains, frames, suspensions and wheels
Steering components, transmission and differential parts,
connecting rods
Railway components
Pipe fittings AS3673
24
Joining cast iron
Welding
Braze-welding
Brazing
Soldering
Mechanical connections
25
Weldability
White cast iron - not weldable
Small attachments only
Grey cast iron - low weldability
Welding largely restricted to salvage and repair
Ductile and malleable irons - good weldability
(inferior to structural steel)
Welding increasingly used during manufacture
29
White cast iron
White fracture surface
No graphite, because carbon forms Fe3C or more
complex carbides
Abrasion resistant
Often alloyed
Australian Standard DR20394 “Wear resistant
white cast irons”
34
Effects of alloy elements
Promote graphite (Si, Ni)
Promote carbides (Cr)
Affect matrix microstructure
Ferrite, pearlite, martensite or austenite
Corrosion resistance (Cr)
Specific effects
35
High chromium irons
12 to 28% chromium
Less effect on hardenability than in steels
Mo, Ni, Mn, and Cu also added for hardenability
to give martensite
41
Ni-hard irons
Grinding balls
1-2.2 Si, 5-7 Ni, 7-11 Cr
M7C3 eutectic carbides in martensite
43
Abrasion resistant irons
Pearlitic white irons
Cheap but wear more quickly
Martensitic white irons
More expensive but better wearing
ASTM A532-75A
48
Can be heat treated
Stress relief up to 700˚C
Tempering of martensite
Subzero treatment to remove retained austenite
Annealing for machining followed by QT
49
Microstructures
Pearlite and ferrite in Fe3C matrix
Austenite / martensite in Fe3C matrix
M7C3 in a martensite matrix
50
Abrasion resistance
Depends on cast iron
Depends also on abrasive and environment
Eg Silicon carbide wears martensitic and pearlite
equally
Silica wears martensitic irons much less than pearlitic
ones
51
STEELS
Classification of steels (EN 10020)
• Non-alloy steels (carbon steels)
• Alloy steels
Inclusions, Non-alloy Alloy steels
% steels (carbon
steels)
Mn ≤ 1,65 > 1,8
Si ≤ 0,5 > 0,5
Cr ≤ 0,3 > 0,5
Ni ≤ 0,3 > 0,5
Ti ≤ 0,05 > 0,12
V ≤ 0,1 > 0,12
Non-alloy and alloy steels classification (1)
Non-alloy steels Alloy steels
(carbon steels)
C content based Alloying degree based
- low C-steels (<0,25%) - low alloy steels (<2,5%)
Ballon steels
Pressure vessel steels
Seamless pipes
Welded pipes
Structural steels (5)
Low alloy steels (3)
Spring steels
high Re, σR, modulus of elasticity E
C = 0,5...0,7%
Mn-steels (1...2% Mn)
Si-steels (2...3% Si)
Cr-V-steels
TT: Hardening + mid. temp. (300...400°C) Trostite structure
Ball bearing steels
High hardness (≥ 62 HRC)
C ≈ 1%; Cr = 0,6...1,5% – 105 Cr6
Ball races (63...64 HRC), balls (61...62 HRC)
Structural steels (6)
Medium alloy steels (1)
Cementizing (case hardening)
steels (0,1...0,25% C)
Cr-steels
Cr-Mn-steels
Cr-Ni-steels
B-steels
HT: Tcem + hard. + low. temp.
Surface (C0,8) – 58...62 HRC
Core (C = 0,1...0,25) – 30...42 HRC
Structural steels (7)
Medium alloy steels (2)
Quenching and tempering steels
Requirements:
Reliability ( Rm, Rp0,2; acceptable KU and TBCT)
High hardenability (D50, D95, T50)
Principles pf alloying:
Alloying hardenability (Ma, Ml) (all exc. Al and Co)
At solution in F, Rm and TBCT, alloying degree as low as
possible (for D50)
Structural steels (8)
Medium alloy steels (3)
Quenching and tempering steels (0,3...0,5% C; 3...5% all.elem.)
D95, mm T50, °C
I gr – non-alloy steels (carbon
10...15 20
steels)
II gr – Si-Mn/Cr-steels (~1%) 20 -30...-50
III gr – Mn-Cr-steels 25 -60
IV gr – Ni-Mo-steels 40 -80
V gr – Ni-refractory. (W, Mo, V
100 -100
jt.)
Rm 1200 N/mm2; Rp0,2 1100 N/mm2; A = 10...12%; KU40J
Structural steels (9)
Medium alloy steels (4)
Nitriding steels (C-, all. elem. – same as in hard. and temp. steels)
Tnitr 500...600°C (differently from cem.)
All. elem. Cr, Mo, Al + N CrN, MoN, AlN
Properties:
Hardness: surface – alloy steels 950...1150 HV,
non-alloy steels (carbon steels) 400...500 HV
Core 250...300 HB
High fatigue strength ( by comp. stresses induced nitrides)
Structural steels (10)
High alloy steels (1)
Corrosion resistant steels (1)
Cr-steels, C – min (0,08...0,2%)
0,1...0,4% – for hardenability
Cr = 13, 17 or 27%
Ccorrosion resistance , C 0,1 %C – ferritic steels