This invention relates to heat treatment of steel railway wheels, and in particular but not only to treatment methods involving use of the martensite phase transition to produce a required distribution of residual stress in a wheel.
The running surface of a railway wheel (the tread) is subjected to an arduous environment of contact stresses and friction from contact with rails whilst supporting large axle loads. In many cases the tread of a railway wheel is also used as the brake drum of the train through brake shoes that are applied directly to the tread, consequently subjecting the tread to significant fluctuations in temperature and thermal stress.
All these inputs contribute to degradation of the tread which takes on forms of varying proportions of wear, rolling contact fatigue and thermal fatigue of the tread surface and material below the tread surface. Due to degradation of the tread, it is normally periodically refreshed by machining material from the surface to expose fresh undamaged material and restore the desired tread profile. Hence the outer part of the wheel, the rim on which the tread is the outer most surface is made sufficiently thick as to allow both sufficient structural support and additional material for refreshing via machining.
As the treads of wheels are subjected to cracking from fatigue, the wheel must have an inherent resistance to propagation of such cracks which in most railway wheels is provided by a combination of a material with sufficient toughness and a distribution of compressive residual stress (internal forces in the material) in the area most subject to cracking. In particular to resist cracking originating at and near the tread, the circumferential residual stresses should be compressive in the outer portion of the wheel rim. Heat treatment involving a tread quenching process such as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,899,516 is often used to achieve this distribution, for example.
The conventional processes for producing compressive residual stress in a steel wheel are suitable for wheels having a pearlitic microstructure, rather than bainitic, martensitic or mixed bainitic-martensitic microstructures. Conventional processes for heat treatment of railway wheels when applied to wheels having a martensitic microstructure generally produce a highly undesirable tensile residual stress in the outer portion of the rim. This is because pearlitic steels and bainitic/martensitic steels have very different characteristics when cooled from austenitic temperatures (>˜700- 950° C. depending on steel composition).
In this specification the term “bainitic/martensite” refers to steels which have bainitic, martensitic or mixed bainitic-martensitic microstructures
It is therefore an object of the invention to provide an improved method for treating railway wheels, or at least to provide an alternative to existing methods.
In one aspect the invention may broadly be said to reside in a method of treating a steel railway wheel, including: (a) heating the wheel to form austenite throughout the plate and rim portions, (b) cooling to form bainite/martensite in an outer plate portion, (c) cooling to form bainite/martensite in an inner portion of the rim, and (d) cooling to form bainite/martensite in the outer portion of the rim.
Steps (a) to (d) are carried out sequentially to produce compressive residual stress in the outer rim portion. Preferably the outer plate portion is cooled by quenching for between 2 and 15 minutes, preferably between 5 and 10 minutes. Preferably the inner rim portion is cooled by quenching for between 2 and 15 minutes, preferably between 5 and 10 minutes.
Preferably the outer portion of the rim is cooled to room temperature or alternatively tempered for between 1 and 4 hours.
In another aspect the invention resides in a method of treating a steel railway wheel, including: (a) heating the wheel above the austenite transition temperature, (b) cooling an outer plate portion of the wheel below the martensite start temperature, (c) cooling an inner portion of the rim below martensite start temperature, and (d) cooling the outer portion of the rim to below the martensite start temperature.
In a further aspect the invention resides in a steel railway wheel which has been treated according to any of the preceding claims. The wheel preferably has a rim portion with a bainitic, martensitic or mixed bainitic-martensitic microstructure, with predominantly compressive circumferential stress in the outer portion of the rim.
The steel preferably has a composition in the range: 0.05-0.3% C, 3.00-5.00% Mn, 0.45-1.85% Si, (all % wt with no other alloying additions above 0.05% wt). A range of other compositions may also be suitable for wheels which are treated according to these methods.
The invention also resides in any alternative combination of features which are indicated in this specification. All equivalents of these features are deemed to be included.
Preferred embodiments of the invention will be described with respect to the accompanying drawings, of which:
Referring to the diagrams it will be appreciated that the invention can be implemented in a range of different ways for a range of different wheels. The embodiments described here are given by way of example only.
However, when bainitic/martensitic steels are cooled from austenitic temperatures the thermal contraction of the steel is accompanied with a large phase change expansion known as the martensite transition. This effect is caused by an atomic structural phase change from the face centre cubic metallic crystal structure of austenite to the body centred tetragonal structure of martensite. Known procedures of quenching a wheel made from martensitic/bainitic steel therefore tend to produce tensile stress in the tread. The martensitic transition typically takes place between 300 and 500° C., with the start (higher) temperature being typically 300 to 450° C., depending on the steel composition.
The following procedure is applied to the wheel:
The procedure described bore would be suitable for a range of bainitic, martensitic or mixed bainitic-martensitic steels, however it is intended typically for use with steels of the composition: 0.05-0.3% C, 3.00-5.00% Mn, 0.45-1.85% Si, (all % wt with no other alloying additions above 0.05% wt). Other compositions may also be suitable, such as those which substitute Cr or Mo for Mn, for example.
Such steels will produce bainitic-martensitic microstructures that have useful mechanical properties and could offer performance benefits to railway wheels in terms of being more durable and requiring less maintenance and improved safety. Typical mechanical properties of such steels are listed below.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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2007903276 | Jun 2007 | AU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/AU2008/000875 | 6/19/2008 | WO | 00 | 7/13/2010 |