For rapid surface engineering of Cr-containing alloys by low-temperature nitrocarburization, we introduce a process based on pyrolysis of solid reagents, e.g., urea, performed in an evacuated closed vessel. Upon heating to temperatures high enough for rapid diffusion of interstitial solute, but low enough to avoid second-phase precipitation, the reagent is pyrolyzed to a gas atmosphere containing molecules that (i) activate the alloy surface by stripping away the passivating Cr2O3-rich surface film (diffusion barrier) and (ii) rapidly infuse carbon and nitrogen into the alloy. We demonstrate quantitatively that this method can generate a subsurface zone with concentrated carbon and nitrogen comparable to what can be accomplished by established (e.g., gas-phase- or plasma-based) methods, but with significantly reduced processing time. As another important difference to established gas-phase processing, the interaction of gas molecules with the alloy surface can have auto-catalytic effects by altering the gas composition in a way that accelerates solute infusion by providing a high activity of HNCO. The new method lends itself to rapid experimentation with a minimum of laboratory equipment.
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