The present invention relates in general to the heat treatment of metals and more particularly to the operation of gas hardening of steel parts having previously undergone heat treatment (such as heating before quench, annealing, tempering) or thermochemical treatment (such as case hardening, carbonitriding). Such gas hardening operations are generally carried out by circulating a pressurized gas in a closed circuit between a charge and a cooling circuit. For practical reasons, gas quench hardening installations generally operate under pressures between 4 and 20 times the atmospheric pressure (4 to 20 bar or 4 000 to 20 000 hectopascals). In the present description, the pressure is designated by the bar, with the understanding that 1 bar is equal to 1 000 hPa.
The installation in
For practical reasons, the gas most commonly used for cooling is nitrogen, because it is an inert and inexpensive gas. Furthermore, its density is ideal for simple installations with blowers or turbines, and its heat transfer coefficient is sufficiently satisfactory. In fact, it is known, in gas hardening systems, that the temperature must be lowered as rapidly as possible for the steel transformation to occur satisfactorily, from the austenitic phase to the martensitic phase without passing through the pearlitic and/or bainitic phases.
However, it has been observed that in certain critical cases, nitrogen quench hardening installations are not suitable for obtaining a sufficient temperature lowering rate. Hydrogen and helium quench hardening have therefore been tested. A drawback of the use of these gases is that existing installations, dimensioned for nitrogen quench hardening, particularly as regards ventilation capacity, are not optimized for the use of a gas of substantially different density. Furthermore, helium is a substantially more costly gas than nitrogen, while hydrogen incurs risks of inflammability and its use requires special precautions.
It should also be emphasized that all these prior approaches (like those recommending the use of hydrogen or helium) were based on an attempt to improve only the convective heat transfer in the treatment chamber.
The prior art can be illustrated by citing the specific approach of patent EP-1 050 592, which provides for the presence of gases such as CO2 and NH3 in the quenching gas, but without any additional improvement in the quenching efficiency in comparison with the inert mixtures already employed, the usefulness of their presence deriving chiefly, according to the patent, from two factors, on the one hand, the simultaneous achievement of thermochemical effects (oxidation, nitriding, etc.) which can be expected, and, on the other, the easier physical integration in a comprehensive heat treatment method (e.g. in a case hardening method) because the downstream hardening can then use the same gases as the actual treatment located upstream.
Still in connection with CO2, reference can be made to the following two patents in which, when CO2 is mentioned in hardening operations, this occurs in a completely different application (for example, in plastics technology as in patent WO 00/07790 or in liquid form as in patent WO 97/15420).
In this context, one of the objects of the present invention is to provide a quench hardening installation using a cooling gas that is thermally more efficient than nitrogen but is inexpensive and simple to use, allowing the cooling of the most demanding materials.
A further object of the present invention is to provide a cooling method using a gas compatible with existing installations currently functioning with nitrogen (and hence not requiring any significant change to the installation).
To achieve these objectives, the present invention, in a method for rapidly cooling metal parts using a pressurized cooling gas, provides for the use of a cooling gas which comprises one or a plurality of gases absorbing infrared radiation, selected so as to improve the heat transfer to the part by combining radiative and convective heat transfer phenomena, and so as to improve the convective heat transfer coefficient in comparison with conventional conditions of cooling with nitrogen.
The concept of “improvement in comparison with conventional conditions of cooling with nitrogen” should be understood according to the invention as comparing identical pressure, temperature or quenching installation conditions.
The method according to the invention can further adopt one or a plurality of the following technical features:
The invention further relates to the use, in an installation for rapidly cooling metal parts using a pressurized cooling gas, which installation is optimized for operation with nitrogen, of a cooling gas comprising from 20 to 80% of an infrared absorbing gas and from 80 to 20% of hydrogen or helium or mixtures thereof, the composition of the cooling gas being adjusted so as to make significant changes to the installation unnecessary.
As will have been understood, the concepts according to the invention of “choice” of the absorbent gas or gases, or of “adjustment” to obtain the desired properties of heat transfer coefficient, or of density or of endothermic character, must be understood as pertaining to the nature of the components of the mixture and/or their content in this mixture.
The merit of the present invention is accordingly to stand apart from the conventional approach of the prior art of simply improving the convective heat transfer conditions, by demonstrating that the proportion of radiative heat transfer in the total heat transfer is between about 7 and 10% (in the range from 400 to 1050° C.), hence very significant, and that it is therefore extremely advantageous to address this aspect of the heat transfer to account for it and to exploit it.
These objects, features and advantages, and others of the present invention, are described in detail in the following non-limiting description of particular embodiments, provided with reference to the figures appended hereto among which:
According to the present invention, it is proposed to use, as a quenching gas, a gas absorbing infrared radiation or a mixture based on such infrared absorbing gases (designated below by absorbent gas), such as carbon dioxide (CO2) and, if required, containing one of more gases having a good convective heat transfer capability (designated below by additive gas) added to it, such as helium or hydrogen.
Such a mixture offers the advantage, in comparison with conventional quenching gases or gas mixtures using gases transparent to infrared radiation, such as nitrogen, hydrogen and helium, of absorbing heat both by convective and radiative phenomena, thereby increasing the total heat flux extracted from a charge to be cooled.
It is possible to add, to this mixture, other gases, designated herein after by supplementary gas, such as nitrogen, considered both as a simple carrier gas and in a more active role making it possible, as shown below, to optimize the properties of the gas mixture, such as density, thermal conductivity, viscosity, etc.
According to an embodiment of the present invention, as shown in
According to a further advantageous embodiment of the present invention, it is proposed to use an absorbent gas mixture (and if applicable an additive gas) possibly with the addition of supplementary gases, in density conditions optimized so that hardening can be carried out in quench hardening installations normally designed and optimized to operate in the presence of nitrogen. For this purpose, carbon dioxide is mixed, for example, with helium, used as an additive gas, so as to combine an optimization of the convective heat transfer coefficient with an average mixture density that is approximately the same as that of nitrogen. Existing installations can accordingly be used with comparable ventilation rates and capacities and existing gas ventilation and deflection structures, without having to make significant changes to the installation.
This offers the advantage that, in a given installation, optimized for nitrogen hardening, the user can, in normal conditions, when appropriate to the materials concerned, use nitrogen as a quenching gas and, only in the specific cases of more demanding materials, i.e. when the specific conditions of the parts or the steels to be treated demand specific treatments, use for example the mixture of carbon dioxide and helium given as an example, or the mixture of carbon dioxide and hydrogen also exemplified herein.
Obviously, as it will appear clearly to a person skilled in the art, if the invention has been particularly illustrated above using CO2, other gases absorbing IR radiation are also usable here without departing at any time from the framework of the present invention, such as saturated or unsaturated hydrocarbons, CO, H2O, NH3, NO, N2O, NO2, and mixtures thereof.
Similarly, if particular emphasis has been laid above on an advantageous embodiment of the invention, in which the concentrations of the various gases are adjusted to obtain both good heat transfer efficiency and density conditions approaching nitrogen, in order to avoid having to make any significant changes to the installation, it is possible, without departing from the framework of the present invention, to privilege the optimal heat transfer conditions, even if it means using mixtures of density more distant from that of nitrogen, and accordingly having to make changes to the installation, particularly to the stirring motor (adoption of a motor with a different power rating, or of a speed variator system). This could, for example, be the case for a gas mixture comprising 90% CO2 and 10% hydrogen, with a density about 40% higher than that of nitrogen.
A further advantage of the use of such a mixture of carbon dioxide and hydrogen is that, under the usual conditions for quench-hardening steel parts, endothermic chemical reactions occur between the CO2 and the hydrogen, thereby further accelerating the cooling. Moreover, it is observed that in the presence of CO2, the explosion hazard associated with hydrogen is substantially reduced, even if oxygen is inadvertently introduced.
Obviously, as already pointed out above, the present invention is susceptible to a number of variants and modifications which will appear to a person skilled in the art, particularly as regards the choice of the gases, the optimization of the proportions of each gas, with the understanding that, if desired, ternary mixtures such as CO2/He/H2 can be used, and that other gases could be added, called supplementary gases above.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02/11680 | Sep 2002 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/FR03/00053 | 1/9/2003 | WO | 7/25/2005 |