New manufacturing technologies, such as Sheet-Bulk Metal Forming, are facing the challenges of highly stressed tool surfaces which are limiting their service life. For this reason, the load-adapted design of surfaces and the subsurface region as well as the application of wear-resistant coatings for forming dies and molds made of high-speed steel has been subject to many research activities. Existing approaches in the form of grinding and conventional milling processes do not achieve the surface quality desired for the forming operations and therefore often require manual polishing strategies afterward. This might lead to an unfavorable constitution for subsequent PVD coating processes causing delamination effects or poor adhesion of the wear-resistant coatings. To overcome these restrictions, meso- and micromilling are presented as promising approaches to polishing strategies with varying grain sizes. The processed topographies are correlated with the tribological properties determined in an adapted ring compression test using the deep drawing steel DC04. Additionally, the influence of the roughness profile as well as the induced residual stresses in the subsurface region are examined with respect to their influence on the adhesion of a wear-resistant CrAlN PVD coating. The results prove the benefits of micromilling in terms of a reduced friction factor in the load spectrum of Sheet-Bulk Metal Forming as well as an improved coating adhesion in comparison to metallographic finishing strategies, which can be correlated to the processed roughness profile and induced compressive residual stresses in the subsurface region.
Novel mesoporous, high specific surface area (up to 562 m2 g−1) 0D-nanocarbon-based silicon-containing ceramic composites were produced by a straightforward sol–gel method followed by polymer-to-ceramic transformation.
SiFeO(N,C)-based ceramic papers were prepared via a one-pot synthesis approach by dip-coating a cellulose-based paper template with a polymeric perhydropolysilazane precursor modified with iron(III)acetylacetonate. The preceramic composites were subsequently pyrolyzed in ammonia atmosphere at 500, 700, and 1000 • C, respectively, and the characteristics of the three resulting ceramic papers were comparatively investigated. Scanning electron microscopy revealed that in each sample, the morphology of the template is successfully transferred on the ceramic system, with the cellulosederived fibers being converted to elemental carbon encased by a SiFeO(N,C) coating. Electron transparent cross-sectional samples for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were prepared from the ceramic papers, employing a standard ultramicrotomy slice cutting procedure, allowing for a detailed characterization of their in situ generated micro-/nanostructure as well as occurring crystalline phases.TEM imaging and diffraction revealed that depending on pyrolysis temperature a different microstructure with a distinct phase assemblage is generated in the polymer-derived ceramic papers. Crystallization from the polymer precursor starts with the precipitation of wüstite (Fe (1-x) O) nanoparticles at 700 • C inside the ceramic coating and secondary ε-Fe x N at the fiber-coating interface. Upon pyrolysis at 1000 • C however, the sample primarily accommodates metallic αiron nanocrystals that impart ferromagnetic characteristics to the ceramic paper.The results show that the template-assisted polymer-derived ceramic route is a feasible approach in the production of complex ceramic compounds with fibrous paper-like morphology. By adjusting the pyrolysis temperature, microstructure and phase composition of the ceramic paper can be conveniently tailored to the needs of its respective application.
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