The present invention relates to a method for producing steel sheets with an improved visual quality after forming.
In order to further improve the visual appearance of automobiles when painted, it has been discovered that while adjusting the strip topography to improve the paint appearance is indeed important, it is not sufficient. Multiple parameters are important for a good visual appearance of the paint in the production of formed and painted sheets.
An essential index for a good paintability and a good paint appearance is the so-called wave surface arithmetic value (Wsa). The 17 Oct. 2013 article “Novel Sheet Galvanizing Gives Automotive Paint Mirror Finish” [Neuartige Blechverzinkung bringt Automobillack auf Hochglanz] published on www.blechnet.com states that a Wsa value of the sheets below 0.35 μm ensures a good paint appearance. First of all, the article says that a low Wsa value is an indication of a good paint appearance. The article goes on to say that because the Wsa value simultaneously correlates to the average roughness (Ra), this also influences the formability. According to the article, experience has shown that it is important to reduce the Wsa value of the sheets to below 0.35 μm, whereas in conventional sheets the Wsa does indeed lie above 0.5 μm, and to simultaneously provide enough lubrication pockets for the forming, which is successfully achieved by increasing the so-called peak count.
In this case, the focus is placed on using the skin-pass roll to anticipate the subsequent topography of the sheet as a negative allowance in a manner similar to the one used in printing technology. In order to achieve the above-mentioned Wsa values, new roll textures were produced and in addition, thermal processes in the furnace were improved.
A comparable report has been published by thyssenkrupp Steel Europe at www.besserlackieren.de, which likewise includes a description that the surface finishing of the galvanized sheet makes it possible to achieve a corresponding quality.
EP 0 234 698 B1, for example, has disclosed a method in which a surface roughness with defined raised areas is produced.
DE 112014000102 T5 has disclosed a method that is intended to reduce the undulation of automobile parts by means of special nozzle settings.
Austrian standard EN10346 has disclosed continuously hot-dip refined articles made of steel for cold forming; this standard relates to the known coatings zinc, zinc/iron, zinc/aluminum, zinc/magnesium, aluminum/zinc, and aluminum/silicon.
The steels mentioned therein are all low-alloyed steels and in particular, multi-phase steels, TRIP steels, complex-phase steels, and ferritic-bainitic steels.
Particularly in the automotive sector, IF and BH steels are used in the body shell.
An IF steel is understood to be an “interstitial free” steel that does not have any interstitially embedded foreign atoms (the low quantities of carbon and nitrogen are completely segregated as carbides and nitrides by means of titanium and/or niobium) and therefore has an outstanding plastic deformability. Such steels are used for deep-drawn components in automotive engineering.
Bake-hardening steels (BH steels) feature a significant increase in the yield strength as part of the paint baking (typically at 170° C. for 20 min) in combination with a very good deformability. These steels also have a very good dent resistance, which is why these steels are often used for body shell applications.
The object of the invention is to create a method for producing steel sheers with which the desired Wsa values in the deformed state are better achieved and the ranges can be reliably maintained.
The measurement of the Wsa values was performed on Marciniak stretch-drawing specimens with 5% deformation, using SEP1941, but in the rolling direction.
According to the invention, it has been determined that just by optimizing the long undulation in the non-deformed state, it is not possible to reliably and definitely keep the Wsa value of body shell components in the deformed state within the desired range of <0.35 μm.
According to the invention, it has been determined that the required long undulation limits in the deformed state can be definitely respected by performing selective steps on the material.
In other words, especially by changing the alloy composition in the IF and BH steels used, it is possible to achieve a more reliable production of body shell materials with reduced long undulation in the deformed state.
Correspondingly, it has been determined according to the invention that an ensured adjustment of reduced long undulation in the deformed stale can be achieved particularly in IF steels and bake-hardening steels by adding niobium to the alloy in percentages of >0.01% by weight. In particular, for example, the steel type HX180BD can be stabilized with a Wsa value at a level of below 0.30 μm.
When using IF steels, if instead of the usual titanium concept for body shell sheets, a titanium-niobium concept is used, then the Wsa level can be stabilized to an average of 0.27 μm.
As has been possible to determine according to the invention, when suitable skin-pass rolls are selected, the long undulation in the deformed state is not significantly influenced by the long undulation that is set before the dressing procedure during the stripping procedure.
It has also turned out to be advantageous that with the addition of Nb to the steel, the heating rates in the recrystallization annealing can be varied within a broad range without negatively influencing the Wsa value. The heating rates are between 8 and 30 K/s.
The dressing or temper-rolling procedure is used to adjust the mechanical properties and to selectively influence the surface roughness. In the course of this procedure, both the roughness and the long undulation are transmitted from the roll to the strip.
For BH steels, the degree of dressing for adjusting the required mechanical properties is greater than or equal to 1%, preferably greater than 1.1%.
The invention will be explained by way of example based on several drawings. In the drawings:
It is clear that there is a quite significant variation range in the deformed Wsa values. At the same time, there is a significant increase in the Wsa values in the course of the deformation. This extremely broad spread of values, which were determined longitudinal to the rolling direction in Marciniak specimens with five percent deformation, demonstrates that it is hardly possible to control the Wsa value according to the prior art.
Starting with example 87, they are a bake-hardening steel according to the invention. Whereas the non-deformed Wsa values have a spread that corresponds to the prior art, the advantageous, significantly improved Wsa values after the deformation are quite readily apparent. It is clear that with the invention, the values can be reliably kept at or below 0.30 μm.
According to the invention, a niobium content >0.01% by weight (=100 ppm) in the alloy is set. According to the invention, the niobium content is preferably set to 0.011 to 0.15% by weight, more preferably 0.011 to 0.10% by weight, and even more preferably 0.011 to 0.05% by weight. With these values, it is possible to achieve extremely good Wsa values.
Through the use of suitable skin-pass rolls, it is possible to reduce the undulation values of the metallically coated strip in the non-deformed state to a low level regardless of the stripping medium. This improvement is no longer present, however, in the deformed state.
In a comparison test, the long undulation in an IF steel with a niobium content according to the invention of 0.015% by weight (
Through the addition of Nb, it was possible to achieve the fact that little or no increase in the Wsa values occurred due to the deformation.
Particularly after the deformation, the IF steels produced according to the invention exhibit considerably better properties than conventional IF steels according to the prior art.
According to the invention, the IF steel can have the alloy composition shown in
Alternatively with the composition according to
Preferably, the IF steel has the composition according to
Alternatively with the composition according to
A particularly preferred composition of the IF steel is shown in
The remainder is respectively composed of iron and smelting-dictated impurities.
The above-mentioned elements can be added to the alloy individually or in a combination of several of these elements, for example 0.02% by weight hafnium and tungsten, respectively.
According to the invention, the BH steel can have the alloy composition according to
Preferably, the BH steel has the composition according to
Preferably, the BH steel has the composition according to
Here, too, the elements can be added to the alloy individually or in combination, with the quantity in the respective ranges being determined stoichiometrically.
For a low long undulation in the non-deformed state and subsequently in the deformed state, the roll roughness (Ra) for the dressing procedure is set to values of between 1.6 and 3.3 μm in order to be able to maintain the roughness values in the strip that are required by the customer. A further reduction of the Wsa values is possible by reducing roll roughness values, but would require a reduction of the customer's roughness specifications.
In hot-dip galvanization applications, suitable coating materials particularly include all hot-dip galvanization baths.
For coating IF steels or also bake-hardening steels, it is particularly suitable to use a zinc/magnesium coating, with the zinc bath containing 0.2 to 8.0% by weight magnesium.
Instead of magnesium, it is also possible to use aluminum in the melt and it is likewise possible to also use magnesium and aluminum within the indicated limits of 0.2 to 8% by weight.
In a mix, the range is preferably 2% by weight magnesium and 2% by weight aluminum or 2.5% by weight aluminum and 1.5% by weight magnesium.
In the context of the application, coatings are metallic coatings.
In the invention, it is advantageous that by taking steps within the alloy concept in the steel, it is possible to successfully set the Wsa value to a very low level in a very stable way.
The following examples should demonstrate the positive influence of the niobium content on the formation of the Wsa value level in the formed component (measured in Marciniak specimens with 5% deformation) and should differentiate it from other influences.
In the examples for the coating variants Z and ZM listed below, strip speeds and nozzle settings have also been indicated for the sake of completeness. They all lie within the parameters that are customary according to the prior art, but have no significant influence on the Wsa values in the deformed state. The stripping was performed exclusively with nitrogen because otherwise, the visual impression of the sheets could not be produced to the customers' satisfaction.
The following tables show both the stripping parameters and the corresponding undulation values with a conventional zinc coating, for example after a hot-dip galvanization.
Z is the distance between the strip and the stripping nozzle along the stripping media outlet point and d is the average height of the outlet point of the nozzle above the zinc bath; both are indicated in mm.
v corresponds to the strip speed in m/s.
The alloy composition shows the respective alloy elements in percentage by weight.
Primarily, the examples in the table make it clear that the nozzle parameters have hardly any influence on the undulation values since both the exemplary embodiments according to the invention and those not according to the invention were produced with similar nozzle parameters.
As shown by the examples in Table 3 (which corresponds to
It is also clear here that the nozzle setting has no significant influence on the undulation.
Z is the distance between the strip and the stripping nozzle along the stripping media outlet point and d is the average height of the outlet point of the nozzle above the zinc bath; both are indicated in mm.
v corresponds to the strip speed in m/s.
With the ZM coating, respectively with 1.5% by weight Mg and 2.5% by weight Al.
All of the alloy contents are indicated in % by weight unless explicitly indicated otherwise.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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102017103308.4 | Feb 2017 | DE | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/EP2018/053883 | 2/16/2018 | WO | 00 |