The present invention concerns a method for heat treating a steel component, and a steel component that has been subjected to such a method.
Carburizing is a heat treatment process in which iron or steel absorbs carbon liberated when the metal is heated in the presence of a carbon bearing material with the intent of making the metal harder. Depending on the carburizing time and temperature, an affected area can vary in carbon content. Longer carburizing times and higher temperatures lead to greater carbon diffusion into the metal as well as an increased depth of carbon diffusion. When the iron or steel is cooled rapidly by quenching, the higher carbon content on the outer surface becomes hard via the transformation from austenite to martensite while the core remains soft and tough as a ferritic and/or pearlitic microstructure. Carburizing is most commonly used on low-carbon workpieces which are placed in contact with a high-carbon gas, liquid or solid. It produces a hard workpiece surface with a case hardness depth of up to 10 mm and a tough and ductile workpiece core.
The volume change that occurs between the carburized area (case) and the base material (core) of a metal creates compressive residual stress (CRS). It can be desirable to create maximal compressive stress in a metal. Over-carburizing a metal may however result in a risk of quench cracking, high surface retained austenite, dimensional instability due to martensite contraction, and low CRS.
An object of the invention is to provide an improved method for heat treating a steel component.
This object is achieved by a method that comprises the steps of a) carburizing the steel component with a carbon potential above 1.0 and then b) carburizing the steel component with a carbon potential above 0.6, c) quenching the steel component, and, when the steel component has cooled down, d) subjecting the steel component to a bainitic treatment, whereby these steps are preferably carried out sequentially.
The method is based on the insight that the carburizing carbon potential and the hardening cycle used when heat treating a steel component influences the steel component's compressive residual stress and consequently its physical properties. It has been found that using a lower carbon potential in the diffusion phase of the carburizing process, (step b)) results in a lower carbon content in the steel component, which is beneficial in terms of physical properties, such as compressive residual stresses, rotating bending fatigue (RBF) (structural fatigue), and toughness. If a high level of CRS is desired, a carbon potential of 0.6-1.2, preferably 0.6-0.9, or 0.65-0.85 should be used in the diffusion phase of the carburizing process, (step b)). Bainitic quenching (step d)) further increases the CRS.
According to an embodiment of the invention step a) is carried out with a carbon potential of 1.0-1.4.
According to a further embodiment of the invention step a) and/or step b) is/are carried out at a temperature of 940-1000° C., or more specifically at 940-980° C., such as at 970° C.
According to an embodiment of the invention step d) is carried out at a temperature of 200-240° C., or more specifically at 215-220° C.
According to another embodiment of the invention the steel component comprises steel with a carbon content of 0.1 to 0.4 weight %, such as 18CrNiMo7-6.
According to a further embodiment of the invention the method comprises the steps of e) cooling the steel component and f) tempering the steel component at a temperature of 160-240° C., or more specifically at 190-210° C., such as 200° C.
According to an embodiment of the invention the steel component comprises or constitutes a rolling element or roller, or a steel component for an application in which is subjected to alternating Hertzian stresses, such as rolling contact or combined rolling and sliding, such as a slewing bearing or a raceway for a bearing. The steel component may include or constitute gear teeth, a cam, shaft, bearing, fastener, pin, automotive clutch plate, tool, or a die. The steel component may for example constitute at least part of a roller bearing, a needle bearing, a tapered roller bearing, a spherical roller bearing, a toroidal roller bearing or a thrust bearing. The steel component may be used in automotive wind, marine, metal producing or other applications which require high wear resistance.
According to an embodiment of the invention the method is used to improve at least one of the following properties of a steel component: compressive residual stress (CRS), rotating bending fatigue (structural fatigue), load-bearing capacity, wear resistance, corrosion resistance, hardness, tribological properties, toughness, service life.
The present invention also concerns a steel component that has been heat treated using a method according to an embodiment of the invention, which exhibits an average CRS of 150-200 MPa or higher, measured between 0.5-1.0 mm from the surface using the bore-hole method.
The present invention will hereinafter be further explained by means of non-limiting examples with reference to the appended figures where;
It should be noted that the drawings have not been drawn to scale and that the dimensions of certain features have been exaggerated for the sake of clarity.
The method comprises the step of c) quenching the steel component in an oil or salt bath with bath temperatures selected to achieve the optimum properties with acceptable levels of dimensional change. Hot oil/salt bath quenching can be used to minimize distortion of intricate parts. The steel component is then d) subjected to a bainitic treatment at a temperature of 220° C., e) cooled, to room temperature for example, and f) tempered at a temperature of 200° C.
Due to the lower carbon content in the steel component, there is a lower risk of quench cracks, and the steel component will have an increased toughness. A low retained austenite level is achieved so that a lower tempering temperature can be used while maintaining a high CRS level. Furthermore, dimensional instability, caused by martensite contraction due to long thermal exposures, will be decreased allowing a lower tempering temperature to be used.
Low temperature tempering (step f)) may be carried out to toughen the steel component, for example at a temperature of 200° C. After tempering, the component is cooled, to room temperature for example, and may then be used in any application in which it is likely to be subjected to stress, strain, impact and/or wear under a normal operational cycle.
Steel components heat treated using a method according to an embodiment of the invention exhibited an average CRS of 150-200 MPa or higher, measured between 0.5-1.0 mm from the surface using the bore-hole method. The CRS of a steel component is namely increased by lowering the carbon potential in the diffusion phase of the carburizing, step b) and changing the quenching mode from martensitic quenching, to bainitic quenching. Steel components heat treated using a method according to an embodiment of the invention also contained finer grains than steel components subjected to a heat treatment according to the prior art.
Less time is needed to carry out the method shown in
Using a method according to the present invention also allows the CRS and hardness of a steel component to be tailored according to requirements, by selecting a suitable carbon potential during carburizing steps a) and/or b).
Steel components subjected to a method according to an embodiment of the present invention may be used with or without subsequent grinding operations.
The top left diagram of
The top right diagram of
It can be seen from the top left and top right diagrams, that a carbon potential between 0.65 and 0.85 during the diffusion phase of the carburizing step b) results in the highest level of CRS.
The bottom left diagram of
Such steel components 10, 12, 14, 16 which have been subjected to a method according to an embodiment of the present invention will exhibit enhanced bearing performance, such as rolling contact fatigue, and consequently have an increased service life due to the presence of an increased level of compressive residual stress.
Further modifications of the invention within the scope of the claims would be apparent to a skilled person.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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1200504-7 | Aug 2012 | SE | national |
This is a National Stage Application claiming the benefit of International Application Number PCT/SE2013/000125 filed on 19 Aug. 2013 (19 Aug. 2013), which claims the benefit of Sweden Patent Application Serial Number 1200504-7, filed on 21 Aug. 2012 (21 Aug. 2012), both of which are incorporated herein by reference in their entireties.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/SE2013/000125 | 8/19/2013 | WO | 00 |