The present invention relates to stainless steel fibers and bundles of stainless steel fibers, obtained by the bundled drawing of wires. The invention further relates to a process for manufacturing such stainless steel fibers.
In bundled drawing of stainless steel fibers a number of stainless steel wires are bundled and drawn together. The individual wires are separated from one another by covering each stainless steel wire, possibly even on wire rod diameter, with a suitable matrix material. All stainless steel wires, covered with matrix material, are enveloped in an envelope material. Once the bundle of enveloped wires, also called the composite wire, is drawn to the desired diameter, the envelope material and the matrix material are removed, usually by leaching. Very often a metal such as iron or copper is used as matrix and/or envelope material. The use of such metal as matrix material is advantageous since a metal has similar deformability properties as the stainless steel wire that has to be drawn into stainless steel fibers. The metal matrix material is compatible with the stainless steel wires during the drawing and annealing operations. The metal matrix material has a lower chemical resistance and allows the stainless steel fibers to be freed from the matrix material in a leaching process quite easily. An important drawback of using a metal as matrix material is the mutual solubility of stainless steel and matrix material that may be observed during heat treatments. This drawback is observed especially with stainless steels that have quick cold work hardening and therefore require frequent heat treatments e.g. AISI 302.
Intermediate heat treatments, performed between two drawing steps, result in a diffusion of elements of the matrix material into the stainless steel wires and/or in a diffusion of the elements of the stainless steel wires into the matrix material. This has as consequence that the composition of the steel may be changed to some extent after a heat treatment. This effect is most pronounced at the surface of the stainless steel fibers.
Differences in the composition of the stainless steel due to diffusion may cause unreliability of the properties of the stainless steel fibers, for example in the electrical and chemical properties or in the behavior of the stainless steel fibers exposed to high temperatures.
Prior art provides only one solution to the drawback of inhomogeneous surface composition of stainless steel fiber, being the use of electrochemical leaching as process for removing the matrix material as described in EP337517A1. This method is not industrially attractive due to excessive investment costs, causing significant cost price increase of the fibers so obtained.
Another consequence of the diffusion is that more matrix material is necessary in order to assure a separation of the stainless steel fibers during manufacturing of the stainless steel fibers.
It is an object of the present invention to provide stainless steel fibers having more reliable properties over the length and circumference of the fibers and with less contamination by diffusion of matrix elements into the fiber over the whole surface of the fibers.
According to the present invention, stainless steel fibers, obtained by the bundled drawing of stainless steel wires embedded in a matrix material and/or in an envelope material, have a composition comprising iron and the following components expressed in percent by weight:
Since the stainless steel fibers are obtained by bundled drawing process, ‘matrix material’ is to be understood as the material applied on the individual stainless steel wires for the bundled drawing process. Such matrix material may for example be copper, iron or a copper or iron alloy. During bundled drawing, usually a bundle of stainless steel wires are enveloped after being embedded into a matrix material. The envelope material is defined as the material applied on a bundle of stainless steel wires on which a matrix material is applied. Such an enveloped bundle of stainless steel wires, being embedded in a matrix material is hereafter referred to as ‘composite wire’.
Usually, 50 to 2000 stainless steel wires are bundled into a composite wire. After reduction of the diameter of the composite wire, and removing of the enveloping and matrix material, an obtained bundle of stainless steel fibers as subject of the invention comprises 50 to 2000 stainless steel fibers. Most preferably 90 to 1000 stainless steel wires are bundled.
The stainless steel fibers according to the present invention have an equivalent diameter ranging between 0.5 and 100 μm, and preferably between 1 and 50 μm. Equivalent diameter is defined as the diameter of an imaginary circle, of which the surface area is identical to the surface area of a cross section of the stainless steel fiber.
According to the present invention, it was found that the bundle of stainless steel fibers have substantially equal properties over the length of the fibers and a substantially homogeneous composition, with less contamination due to diffusion of matrix material, over the whole surface of the fibers. The diffusion of individual elements from the matrix material, such as copper or iron, into the stainless steel fiber is less than 1 at % at a depth of 100 nm below the surface of the stainless steel fiber, independent from the process used to remove the matrix and enveloping material, e.g. by chemical or electrochemical leaching.
Such improved properties are obtained since these bundles of stainless steel fibers require less annealing treatments during the drawing of the composite wire to its final diameter. It is possible to reduce the number of annealing treatments because the steel composition allows high deformation between two annealing treatments.
During annealing treatments, the depth of diffusion of matrix elements into the stainless steel wires in the composite wire increases; during reduction of the diameter of the composite wire, the depth of diffusion decreases proportionally with the diameter reduction. The high deformability of the steel described in the present invention can advantageously be used to reduce the number of annealing treatments and to increase the deformation between annealing treatments or reduction towards the final diameter. These two advantages have both positively effect on the compositional homogeneity of the stainless steel fibers as compared to what is presently known. First of all, diffusion depth may be reduced by a factor 3 or more. Further, the length over which product properties change may be increased by a factor 10 or more, compared to presently known stainless steel fibers.
The homogeneity of the stainless steel fiber according to the present invention is an important advantage over other stainless steel fibers known in the art, since even a small change in the surface composition of the fibers may have influences on the properties of the stainless steel fibers. For example the oxidation and corrosion resistance of stainless steel fibers is dependent upon the compositional homogeneity of the stainless steel fiber surfaces.
It was found that the properties of the stainless steel fibers according to the present invention are more uniform over a taken length of a stainless steel fiber as subject of the invention, compared to a presently known stainless steel fiber, obtained by bundled drawing. Such improved compositional homogeneity provides associated fiber properties, which are more reliable and predictable, and allow a more reliable and economical preventive replacement of such fibers and products comprising these stainless steel fibers.
Preferably, to reach a preferred level of deformability of the composite wire, the composition of the stainless steel satisfies the following relationship:
Steel with such a composition is known from EP953651 and used for cold heading, because of its high deformability, or for rubber reinforcement, because of the favorable combination of tensile strength and cost of manufacturing. According to the MI of the alloy, a maximum for the deformation ε may be used during diameter reduction of the composite wire.
The alloy of the stainless steel fibers as subject of the invention provide several advantages.
Using an alloy as described above, and preferably but not necessarily satisfying above relationship, allows to obtain a deformation ε of the composite wire during drawing of the composite wire, which is higher than 4.5, for example higher than 4.8 or even 5.2 without necessitating an intermediate heat treatment.
Deformation ε is defined as the value of the logarithmic function of the ratio of the initial cross-section S1 to the final cross-section S2 of the composite wire.
With initial cross-section S1 is meant the cross-section of the composite wire measured after a heat treatment and before the composite wire is further drawn. With final cross-section S2 is meant the cross-section of the composite wire after deformation (drawing) without an intermediate heat treatment.
This deformation may comprise different drawing steps, one after another without intermediate heat treatment. S2 is measured after the last drawing step and before the next heat treatment step if any.
According to a second aspect of the present invention a process for the manufacturing of stainless steel fibers by bundled drawing is provided.
The method according to the invention comprises the following steps:
The final reduction provides a composite wire with a final diameter.
Preferably, the components of the alloy satisfy the following relationship:
The stainless steel wires or wire rods provided in step a preferably have a diameter between 100 μm and 20 mm.
In a preferred method the stainless steel wires are embedded in the matrix material by applying a layer of a matrix material on each of the stainless steel wires in a first step. The matrix material comprises for example copper, iron or a copper or iron alloy. The thickness of this layer is for example between 1 μm and 2 mm.
Possibly, the diameter of the coated wires is reduced by a drawing step.
After the application of a layer of a matrix material on the individual wires and possibly after the drawing of the coated wires, the wires may be brought together to form a bundle. Subsequently, an envelope material comprising for example copper or iron or a copper or iron alloy is applied around the bundle to form a composite wire.
Possibly, the method comprises a step of subjecting the composite wire to a heat treatment before reducing the diameter of the composite wire.
The reducing of the composite wire comprises the drawing of the wire by any technique known in the art. Alternatively, the reduction of the diameter may be obtained by a rolling operation.
Alternatingly, the composite wire is reduced in diameter and subjected to a heat treatment. The reductions may comprise several subsequent reduction passes, e.g. drawing operations on wire drawing machines.
According to the present invention, at least once a deformation ε of 4.5 or more is used to reduce the diameter of the composite wire. Preferably, such large reduction is used during the final reduction, providing a final diameter to the composite wire. Stainless steel fibers so obtained benefit most of the improvement of properties over its surface as subject of the invention.
Possibly, although not preferred, a heat treatment is applied after the final reduction.
Possibly, but not necessarily, a deformation ε of more than 4.5 is used for all drawing steps.
The removing of the matrix material comprises preferably the leaching of the composite wire using sulfuric or nitric acid.
For presently known stainless steel bundled drawn fibers, this deformation ε is kept less than 3, or even less than 2.5. To draw a composite wire from diameter immediately after the bundling step, to the final diameter of the composite wire, before removing the enveloping and matrix material, a lot of heat treatments are required when this ε is kept less than 3, especially because of the logarithmic nature of ε. During each heat treatment, matrix material is diffused over a depth of the stainless steel wires, which depends largely on the temperature used during the heat treatment.
When a large diameter reduction may follow a heat treatment, as subject of the invention, the depth over which diffusion is observed after this diameter reduction with large ε, is significantly smaller than if ε is to be kept smaller than 3, as was known in the art. The variation of this depth, caused by temperature variation during the heat treatment before the reduction with large ε, becomes less in absolute value, as compared to presently known bundle drawing processes. Further, this variation is spread over a larger length of the stainless steel wires in the composite wire, since the composite wire elongates more due to this large ε as compared to presently known bundle drawing processes.
Stainless steel fibers according to the present invention can be used in many applications. They can for example be used in filter media, electrically conductive textiles, flocking on metal or polymer substrates, heat-resistant textiles, gas burner membranes or tubes, heating elements, conductive plastics or for EMI-shielding and ESD applications. “EMI-shielding” is to be understood as “electromagnetic interference shielding”. “ESD” is to be understood as “electrostatic discharge”.
At present, when stainless steel fibers are used in EMI shielding and ESD applications, there is a need for mechanically improved stainless steel fibers, having increased fracture strength, meanwhile having a better ductility.
It was found that fibers as subject of the invention may have improved fracture strength, being more than e.g. 2000 MPa, or even more than 2100 MPa. The ductility of the fiber, expressed as strain at fracture, may be more than 1% or even more than 1.1% such as more than 1.2%.
Most surprisingly it was found that even providing such improved mechanical properties, the standard deviation on these parameters of fracture strength and strain at fracture are significantly less, compared to the parameters of presently known stainless steel fibers. Standard deviations of less than 180 MPa, or even less than 140 MPa such as less than 130 MPa for the fracture strength may be obtained. Standard deviations of less than 0.15%, or even less than 0.12% or even less than 0. 1%, for the strain at fracture may be obtained.
The invention will now be described into more detail with reference to the accompanying drawings wherein
Table I gives the composition of stainless steel fibers according to the present invention.
The bold line (1) represents the deformability limit, whereas the lines (2) represent lines of constant tensile strength. During reduction of the diameter of the composite wire, and thereby of the stainless steel wires in this composite wire, a deformation ε is to be chosen lower than the deformation limit (1), corresponding with the MI of the alloy chosen.
Stainless steel fibers as subject of the invention may be provided by using following preferred process, as schematically shown in
This composite wire (204) is alternatingly reduced with several ε (e.g. ε1, ε2) higher than 0.5, e.g. 1.5 and than annealed at a temperature in the range of 800 to 1100° C., E.g. 1030° C. This heat treatment takes 0.05 to 5 minutes, e.g. 2 minutes. These steps are represented as step 24. A final reduction 25 reduces the composite diameter with ε being higher than 4.5. This final reduction 25 provides the final diameter to the composite wire. Finally the matrix and enveloping material is removed (26) by pickling with an acid, e.g. nitric acid. Stainless steel fibers (205) with a diameter in the range of e.g. 6 to 15 μm are obtained, which have an Cu-diffusion of less than 1 at % over a depth of 100 nm over the whole surface of the fibers.
It is obvious for a person skilled in the art, that deformability and limited number of inclusions in the stainless steel wires may further positively influence the deformability of the composite wire.
The stainless steel fibers as subject of the invention have improved fracture strength and strain at fracture, as compared to similar presently known stainless steel fibers.
In Table II underneath, and in
The fracture strength (horizontal axis 310 in
It is clear that these values are significantly different from the values for fracture strength, strain at fracture and standard deviation on these parameters, as in presently known fibers 302a, 302b, 303a and 303b.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
01202775 | Jul 2001 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/EP02/07269 | 7/2/2002 | WO | 00 | 2/20/2004 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO03/010353 | 2/6/2003 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2050298 | Everett | Aug 1936 | A |
3379000 | Webber et al. | Apr 1968 | A |
3698963 | Nunes et al. | Oct 1972 | A |
4042421 | Van Den Sype et al. | Aug 1977 | A |
4925539 | Francois | May 1990 | A |
5071713 | Francois | Dec 1991 | A |
5362439 | Bletton et al. | Nov 1994 | A |
5890272 | Liberman et al. | Apr 1999 | A |
6048416 | Hauser et al. | Apr 2000 | A |
6106639 | Marandel et al. | Aug 2000 | A |
6112395 | Quick et al. | Sep 2000 | A |
6497029 | Quick et al. | Dec 2002 | B1 |
20040247848 | De Bondt et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
20040265576 | De Brond et al. | Dec 2004 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 337 517 | Oct 1989 | EP |
0 851 039 | Jul 1998 | EP |
0 953 651 | Nov 1999 | EP |
1 424 458 | Feb 1976 | GB |
WO 9924216 | May 1999 | WO |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20040265576 A1 | Dec 2004 | US |