The primary purpose of this paper is to study the size effect of surface roughness and realize the quantitative description of the surface roughness in micro-forming process. This work is a continuation of the previous work by the authors. The effects of the initial surface roughness of the specimen, the grain size, and grain orientations on the surface roughness of micro-upsetting products were investigated. The ratio of the number of grains of the surface layer to the total number of grains was adopted to characterize the size effect. The variation of the size effect on the contact normal pressure during the compression process was also analyzed. And the quantitative description of the evolution law of surface roughness for micro-formed parts was realized. The corresponding micro compression experiment was done in order to testify the prediction model.
In this paper, ultrasonic surface rolling processing (USRP) was used to strengthen GCr15-bearing steel. A finite element three-dimensional model of USRP was established to analyze the residual compressive stress and equivalent plastic strain distribution on the bearing steel surface. The microstructure, hardness, surface roughness, and corrosion resistance before and after USRP treatment were characterized by SEM, EBSD, X-ray diffraction (XRD), and electrochemical techniques. Results indicated that USRP treatment can significantly improve the material's surface microstructure and residual compressive stress distribution and obtain a plastic strain layer of about 60μm. After USRP treatment, the Kernel Average Misorientation (KAM) increased, and the dislocation activity was more intensive, resulting in aggregation near grain boundaries, and the percentage of LAGBs increased to 38.8%. Under the combined effect of surface grain refinement, residual compressive stress, and high glossy surface, the self-corrosion current density is reduced by two orders of magnitude, and the corrosion resistance is significantly improved. This investigation suggests a solution to the bearing failure problem and has implications for understanding the deformation mechanism of ultrasonic surface rolling processing.
The effect of different WC grain size additions on the microstructure and grain distribution of Ni–Co coarse crystalline cemented carbide was studied. And then the effect of grain distribution on the mechanical properties of cemented carbide was discussed. The effect of WC grain size on the grain size and coherency of cemented carbide was analyzed by microstructure. And the distribution of grains in the microstructure was investigated by the truncation method. The addition of fine (1.1–1.4 μm), medium (2.3–2.7 μm), and coarse WC (5.6–6.0 μm) particles can increase the nucleation rate of WC grains in the bonded phase. And the higher grain growth driving force can produce the theoretical limitation of nucleation and inhibit the coarsening of WC grains to a certain extent. The WC grain size has an insignificant effect on the frequency of the occurrence of super‐coarse grains in coarse crystalline cemented carbide. The average grain size and super coarse grains in microstructure gradually decrease, which promotes the improvement of transverse rupture strength. The increase of the adjacent degree and the decrease of the mean free path reduce which is beneficial to the improvement of the corrosion resistance of the alloy. The best overall performance of the alloy is achieved when fine‐grained WC is added.
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