This present invention generally relates to peening processes for modifying surfaces of articles. The invention particularly relates to processes for producing peening media, the peening media produced from such processes, and methods of using such media.
Shot peening is a well-established surface treatment commonly used to impart compressive residual stresses in articles to improve their fatigue lives. Depending on the final application of an article, possible drawbacks of this surface engineering process include increased surface roughness from indentations caused by the shot peening media and the potential for contamination of the surface of the article from material transfer to the article from the peening media.
Contamination from peening media can have deleterious effects on properties. Iron-based particles are commonly used as peening media, which if used to peen surfaces of a corrosion resistant alloy can result in poorer corrosion resistance as compared to their untreated counterpart. Particular examples are shot peening of aluminum and magnesium alloys. It has been reported that iron concentration in shot peened magnesium Alloy AZ91 can be as high as 1.5 wt % at the peened surface. Other research using ceramic peening media have indicated no measurable corrosion or fatigue deficit as a result, although contamination from the use of Zirconia (ZrO2) has been reported when used to shot peen titanium alloy Ti-6Al-4V.
One route to circumvent surface contamination of titanium alloys would be to use Ti-based shot peening media. However, the peening media must be harder than the target alloys.
The present invention provides processes for producing peening media, the peening media produced from such processes, and methods of using such media.
According to one aspect of the invention, a process of producing peening media entails providing particles wherein at least surfaces of the particles are formed of or contain a metal that exhibits solubility for oxygen in a metallic phase so as to increase in surface hardness as a result of solid solution strengthening due to oxidizing of the surfaces of the particles. The particles are subjected to a thermal process in an oxygen-containing atmosphere at a process temperature and for a process duration sufficient to oxidize the surfaces of the particles to increase the surface hardness of the particles while not forming an oxide layer that encases the particles.
Other aspects of the invention include shot peening media comprising particles produced by the process described above, as well as peening a surface of an article with particles produced by the process described above, wherein the article is formed of a base metal that is the same as the metal of the particles.
Aspects and advantages of this invention will be appreciated from the following detailed description.
Images a and d of
The present invention is generally applicable to components that benefit from the effects of shot peening, including improved fatigue properties, but may also benefit from improved surface finishes. Notable examples of such components include components employed in aerospace, automotive, and biomedical industries. While the advantages of this invention will be described with reference to shot peening of titanium and its alloys (hereinafter, sometimes simply referred to as titanium), the teachings of this invention are generally applicable to any component that benefits from fatigue resistance.
The present invention encompasses methods capable of increasing the surface hardening of titanium particulate media with oxygen, which is a potent alpha stabilizer that provides solid solution strengthening. Investigations reported below demonstrated that exposure of titanium alloy particles (sometimes simply referred to herein as titanium particles) to oxygen under certain thermal conditions increased surface hardness of the particles, in some cases, by a factor of almost three, as a result of solid solution strengthening without creating a distinct oxide layer or significant sintering of particles.
Titanium displays a large solubility for oxygen in the α-Ti phase and the addition of oxygen (referred to herein as oxidizing) to α-Ti is a potent hardener. It is reported in literature that the hardening in titanium from oxygen additions is due to the distortion of the lattice parameters and the increase of the critical resolve shear stress of pyramidal and basal slip systems allowing for prismatic slip to be activated preferentially. In the investigations reported below, the large solubility of oxygen in α-Ti enabled the oxidizing (which, as used herein, is distinct from oxidation) of titanium particles under certain thermal conditions that sufficiently increased the surface hardness of the particles to permit their use as Ti-based shot peening media for titanium alloy articles, thereby avoiding surface contamination of the articles. The thermal conditions also avoided the formation of a titanium oxide (TiO2) layer that encased the particles, which would otherwise increase the potential for incorporating titanium oxides into the articles being peened with the media.
For the investigations, commercially pure titanium powder (99.8% metal basis) was obtained from Atlantic Equipment Engineers (AEE) with an initial composition of, in weight percent, 0.01 hydrogen, 0.02 carbon, 0.02 nitrogen, 0.18 oxygen, and the balance titanium. The powder had a particle size range of 50 to 150 μm. In order to harden the powder particles without sintering or excessive oxidation of the particles, a controlled diffusion of oxygen into the particles must be achieved. Surface engineering of titanium alloys via case hardening procedures is well established, but often the goal is to incorporate a case with a thickness on the order of hundreds of micrometers. Previous researchers have developed a hardening mechanism for bulk titanium structural parts where the material is oxidized at high temperature to produce a distinct oxide layer between 700°-1000° C. The oxide layer is then dissolved into the alloy by a second heat treatment in an inert atmosphere or vacuum.
To avoid excessive oxidation of the titanium particles, substantially different process parameters from previously reported processes were necessary. Such parameters included much lower processing temperatures. Another difference was the requirement to harden titanium particles through oxygen ingress, as opposed to a bulk titanium material. Dilution of oxygen into the titanium particles must be done without sintering because the powder must remain loose to be an effective shot peening media. However, the goals of incorporating oxygen ingress into fine titanium particles and not sintering the particles are processes in opposition to each other: oxidation will occur at a faster rate as temperature increases, but sintering will also be more effective at elevated temperatures, leading to a decrease in spherical morphology that is desired for shot media. Consequently, thermal treatment temperatures below the oxidation start temperature for titanium (550° C.) were explored to minimize the formation of titanium oxide.
To evaluate the extent of hardening from oxygen ingress into titanium at these moderate temperatures, a bulk specimen of commercially pure (CP) titanium was obtained having an initial composition of, in weight percent, 0.015 hydrogen, 0.08 carbon, 0.03 nitrogen, 0.25 (max) oxygen, and the balance titanium. The specimen was ground and polished with colloidal silica, and cleaned by immersion in ultrasonic baths of acetone, propanol, and methanol. The specimen was then heat treated in air at 530° C. for 20 hours. This duration was selected to allow a diffusion length on the order of 2 to 5 μm for oxygen into titanium. The hardness of the surface as treated, and a metallographically prepared cross-section, was evaluated with nanoindentation using a Hysitron Ti 950 Triboindenter with Berkovich lip with an effective radius of 600 nm and a maximum load of 10 mN. All hardness measurements were calculated using the Oliver and Pharr technique. A partial load-unload method was used to acquire hardness as a function of depth of the indentation. For the results presented herein, only the hardness at a depth of about 200 nm is presented (
Samples of the titanium powder were processed at either 430° C. for 24 hours or 530° C. for 20 hours in ambient atmosphere. The lower temperature processing (430° C.) was chosen to determine a window of conditions capable of minimizing the risk of sintering. Following the thermal treatments, the powder samples were milled (rotating roller mill in a Nalgene bottle with no milling media) for 24 hours. The milling step was performed to break up any small clumps of powder that may have formed during the thermal treatment. The loose powders were cold-mounted in epoxy and polished to reveal cross-sectional areas of their particles. Polished specimens were tested with nanoindentation to measure hardening caused by oxygen ingress, and electron microscopy was performed using a FEI Quanta 650. Phase analysts of loose powders was done through X-ray diffraction with a Broker D8 diffractometer. Quantitative depth profiling measurements were taken from the bulk titanium specimen using a LECO 850 GDS (glow discharge spectrometer). GDS measurements were conducted on the bulk titanium specimen and are assumed to be representative of the oxygen ingress into the powder particles.
Hardness measurements from the bulk titanium specimen (
Powder diffraction measurements (see
where v is the volume of the lattice, F is the structure factor, p is the multiplicity of the plane chosen. The e−2M factor has been neglected in this study because it is a temperature factor not valid at room temperature. Cox and Cα are the fractions of the oxide and α-Ti phase. Table II shows values used for calculation of the volume fraction.
X-ray spectrum taken from powders processed at 530° C. revealed that there is about 0.03 volume fraction of rutile TiO2. SEM imaging was performed on the powder surfaces (see
The above results suggest that similar processing could be done on other metals that show appreciable solubility for oxygen in a metallic phase, notably metals that spontaneously form a thin protective oxide layer when exposed to oxidizing conditions due to their affinity to oxygen and as a result generally have very good corrosion resistance properties, referred to sometimes as “valve metals” and include titanium, tantalum, vanadium, and zirconium. Image c of
The investigations reported above demonstrated a method of case hardening titanium powder with the potential for creating fine shot peening media suitable for peening articles formed of titanium and its alloys. Though lower processing temperatures and longer/shorter durations may be possible, acceptable time/temperature processing conditions for achieving significant hardening of titanium (almost tripling the surface hardness (about 8 GPa) relative to the core hardness (about 3 GPa)) in ambient atmosphere with no mechanical agitation while not significantly sintering nor significant oxidation of the titanium powder is up to about 530° C. for 20 hours, for example, from about 430° C. for 24 hours up to about 530° C. for 20 hours. Processing temperatures and durations will vary depending on the particular metal, the oxidation start temperature of the metal, and the concentration of oxygen in atmospheres that may be used other than ambient. The effective case depth created with twenty-hour oxidizing at 530° C. is on the order of about 2 to 3 μm, which should be sufficient to harden powders with diameters between 50 and 100 μm. While entirely encasing the particles in an oxide layer is to be avoided in order to avoid oxide contamination, the formation of minor oxide islands appears to be acceptable and oxide islands are not expected to add significantly to the strength of the particle surface. This range of particle size is on the order of the size used for fine peening processes. Very fine particles (for example, on live order of about 5 μm and less) would be sieved out during shot sorting, but may provide interesting systems for future study. While the particles used in the investigation were formed entirely of a titanium alloy, it is foreseeable that acceptable results may be achieved with particles with only the surfaces thereof formed of or containing titanium or another metal that exhibits solubility for oxygen in a metallic phase so as to increase in surface hardness as a result of solid solution strengthening due to oxidizing.
While the invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments and investigations, it should be apparent that alternatives could be adopted by one skilled in the art. For example, process parameters such as temperatures and durations could be modified and appropriate materials could be substituted for those noted. As such, it should be understood that the above detailed description is intended to describe the particular embodiments and certain but not necessarily all features and aspects thereof, and to identify certain but not necessarily all alternatives to the embodiments and described features and aspects. Accordingly, it should be understood that the invention is not necessarily limited to any embodiment described herein, and the phraseology and terminology employed above are for the purpose of describing the disclosed embodiments and investigations and do not necessarily serve as limitations to the scope of the invention. Therefore, the scope of the invention is to be limited only by tire following claims.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/862,309, filed Jun. 17, 2019, the contents of which are incorporated herein by reference.
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0578453 | Jan 1994 | EP |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20200391350 A1 | Dec 2020 | US |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
62862309 | Jun 2019 | US |