This is a 371 of International Application PCT/FR03/003358 filed on Nov. 13, 2003; the entire disclosure of the prior application is hereby incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates to an abrasion-resistant steel and its production method.
Steels are known which have a high level of abrasion resistance and whose hardness is approximately 600 Brinell. These steels contain from 0.4% to 0.6% of carbon and from 0.5% to 3% of at least one alloy element, such as manganese, nickel, chromium and molybdenum and they are quenched in order to have a completely martensitic structure. However, these steels are very difficult to weld and cut. In order to overcome these disadvantages, it has been proposed, in particular in EP 0 739 993, that a less hard steel be used for the same purposes, the carbon content of which is approximately 0.27% and which has a quenched structure containing a large quantity of residual austenite. However, these steels are still difficult to cut or weld.
The object of the present invention is to overcome these disadvantages by providing an abrasion-resistant steel plate whose abrasion-resistance is comparable to that of the known steels but which is more suitable for welding and thermal cutting.
To this end, the invention relates to a method for producing a workpiece, and in particular a plate, of steel for abrasion whose chemical composition comprises, by weight:
0.24%≧C<0.35%
0%≦Si≦2%
0%≦Al≦2%
0.5%≦Si+Al≦2%
0%≦Mn≦2.5%
0%≦Ni≦5%
0%≦Cr≦5%
0%≦Mo≦1%
0%≦W≦2%
0.1%≦Mo+W/2≦1%
0%≦Cu≦1.5%
0%≦B≦0.02%
0%≦Ti≦1.1%
0%≦Zr≦2.2%
0.35%<Ti+Zr/2≦1.1%
0%≦S≦0.15%
N≦0.03%
According to the method, the workpiece or the plate is subjected to a thermal quenching processing operation which is carried out in the heat for forming in the hot state, such as rolling, or after austenitization by reheating in a furnace, which consists in:
Quenching may optionally be followed by tempering at a temperature of less than 350° C. and preferably less than 250° C.
The invention also relates to a plate obtained in particular by this method, the steel having a martensitic or martensitic/bainitic structure, the structure containing from 5% to 20% of retained austenite, as well as carbides. The thickness of the plate may be from 2 mm to 150 mm and the flatness thereof is characterized by a deflection less than or equal to 12 mm/m, and preferably less than 5 mm/m.
The invention will now be described in greater detail, but in a non-limiting manner, and illustrated with reference to examples.
In order to produce a plate according to the invention, a steel is produced whose chemical composition comprises, in% by weight:
Furthermore, in order to obtain satisfactory properties, the contents of carbon, titanium, zirconium and nitrogen must be such that:
C−Ti/4−Zr/8+7×N/8≧0.095%.
The expression C−Ti/4−Zr/8+7×N/8=C* represents the content of free carbon after precipitation of the titanium and zirconium carbides, taking into consideration the formation of titanium and zirconium nitrides. That free carbon content C* Must be greater than 0.095% and preferably ≧0.12% in order to have martensite having a minimum hardness. The lower this content, the better the suitability for welding and thermal cutting.
The chemical composition must further be selected so that the quenchability of the steel is sufficient, taking into consideration the thickness of the plate which it is desirable to produce. To this end, the chemical composition must comply with the relationship:
Tremp=1.05×Mn+0.54×Ni+0.50×Cr+0.3×(Mo+W/2)1/2+K>1.8 or more advantageously 2
with: K=0.5 if B≧0.001% and K=0 if B<0.001%.
Furthermore, and in order to obtain good abrasion resistance, the micrographic structure of the steel is constituted by martensite or bainite or an admixture of those two structures, and from 5% to 20% of retained austenite, that structure further comprising coarse titanium or zirconium carbides which are formed at high temperature, or niobium, tantalum or vanadium carbides. The inventors have established that the effectiveness of coarse carbides for improving abrasion resistance could be inhibited by the premature separation thereof and that this separation could be prevented by the presence of metastable austenite which is transformed under the effect of the abrasion phenomena. The transformation of the metastable austenite being brought about by expansion, that transformation in the abraded sub-layer increases the resistance to separation of the carbides and, in that manner, improves abrasion resistance.
Furthermore, the great hardness of the steel and the presence of embrittling titanium carbides make it necessary to limit insofar as possible the planishing operations. From that point of view, inventors have established that, by slowing down the cooling sufficiently in the range of bainitic/martensitic transformation, the residual deformations of the products are reduced, which allows planishing operations to be limited. The inventors established that, by cooling down the workpiece or the plate at a cooling rate Vr<1150×ep1.7, (in this formula, ep is the thickness of the plate expressed in mm, and the cooling rate is expressed in ° C,/s) below a temperature T=800−270×C*−90×Mn−37×Ni−70×Cr−83×(Mo+W/2), (expressed in ° C.), firstly, a significant proportion of residual austenite was produced and, secondly, the residual stresses brought about by the phase changes were reduced. This reduction of stresses is desirable, both for limiting the use of planishing or facilitating it on the one hand, and, on the other hand, for limiting the risks of cracking during subsequent welding and bending operations.
In order to produce a very planar plate which has good abrasion resistance, the steel is produced and is cast in the form of a slab or ingot. The slab or ingot is hot-rolled in order to obtain a plate which is subjected to thermal processing which allows both the desired structure and good surface evenness to be obtained without further planishing or with limited planishing. The thermal processing may be carried out directly in the rolling heat or carried out subsequently, optionally after cold-planishing or planishing at a medium temperature.
In order to carry out the thermal processing operation:
either directly after hot-rolling, or after heating above the point AC3, the plate is cooled at a mean cooling rate greater than 0.5° C./s, that is to say, greater than the critical bainitic transformation velocity, as far as a temperature which is equal to or slightly less than a temperature T=800−270×C*−90×Mn−37×Ni−70×Cr−83×(Mo+W/2), (expressed in ° C.) in order to prevent the formation of ferritic or perlitic constituents. Slightly lower is understood to be a temperature of from T to T-50° C., or more advantageously from T to T-25° C., or even more advantageously, from T to T-10° C.,
Furthermore, it is possible to carry out a stress-relief processing operation, such as a tempering operation, at a temperature less than or equal to 350° C., and preferably less than 250° C.
In this manner, a plate is obtained whose thickness can be from 2 mm to 150 mm and which has excellent flatness, characterized by a deflection of less than 12 mm per metre without planishing or with moderate planishing. The plate has a hardness of approximately from 280 HB to 450 HB. That hardness-depends principally on the content of free carbon C*=C−Ti-/4−Zr/8+7×N/8.
By way of example, steel plates designated A and C according to the invention and D and E according to the prior art were produced. The chemical compositions of the steels, expressed in 10−3% by weight, as well as the hardness and a wear resistance index Rus, are summarized in Table 1.
The wear resistance is measured by the loss of weight of a prismatic test piece which-is rotated in a -container containing graded quartzite aggregate for a period of 5 hours.
The index Rus of a steel is equal to 100 times the ratio of the wear resistance of the steel in question and the wear resistance of a reference steel (steel D). A steel whose index Rus=110 thus has a wear resistance 10% greater than that of the reference steel.
All the plates have a thickness of 27 mm and are quenched after austenitization at 900° C.
After austenitization,
The plates according to the invention have an auto-tempered martensitic/bainitic structure which contains from 5% to 20% of retained austenite and coarse titanium carbides, whilst the plates given by way of comparison have a completely martensitic structure.
Comparison of the wear resistances and the levels of hardness indicates that, though being very substantially less hard than the plates given by way of comparison, the plates according to the invention have a slightly better wear resistance. Comparison of the free carbons indicates that the high level of wear resistance of the plates according to the invention is produced with free carbons which are very substantially smaller, which leads to significantly improved suitability for welding or thermal cutting than is the case for the plates according to the prior art. Furthermore, the deformation after cooling, without planishing, for steels A to C according to the invention is approximately 5 mm/m and 16 mm/m for the steels D and E given by way of comparison. These results indicate the reduction of deformation of the products obtained owing to the invention.
The result in practice, in accordance with the extent of surface evenness required by the users, is:
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
02 14426 | Nov 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR03/03358 | 11/13/2003 | WO | 00 | 2/8/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2004/048619 | 6/10/2004 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
3883347 | Takashima | May 1975 | A |
4170497 | Rao et al. | Oct 1979 | A |
5595614 | McVicker | Jan 1997 | A |
5714116 | Beguinot et al. | Feb 1998 | A |
7459041 | Beguinot et al. | Dec 2008 | B2 |
7462251 | Beguinot et al. | Dec 2008 | B2 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0 527 276 | Feb 1993 | EP |
0 739 993 | Oct 1996 | EP |
9-249935 | Sep 1997 | JP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20060162826 A1 | Jul 2006 | US |