Search citation statements
Paper Sections
Citation Types
Year Published
Publication Types
Relationship
Authors
Journals
The paper justifies the urgency and efficiency of obtaining bimetallic iron-based materials by two-step isothermal sintering to enable forming the structure of the product bases at the first stage and activating diffusion processes in the wear-resistant layer only at the second stage to eliminate any high-porosity areas and brittle inclusions at interlayer boundaries typical for powder materials doped with carbides, nitrides and borides. The analysis of equation solutions for diffusion in two-component heterogeneous powder systems made it possible to propose an option for determining the time and temperature of homogenizing sintering of bimetallic materials taking into account grain-size distribution of powders, concentration and partial diffusion coefficients of components, charge bulk density, initial and final porosity of the products. Experiments proved that bimetallic materials containing 15– 20 wt.% of chromium carbide, 20–25 wt.% of ferrochromium and iron as the rest component in the wear-resistant layer charge have the best combination of hardness, wear resistance and radial compression strength after sintering in a chamber furnace in protective medium at 1150–1180 °C with a holding time of 1,5–2,0 hours at the first stage, and in an induction furnace at 1350– 1370 °C for 25–35 s with a heating rate of 450–470 °C/s at the second stage. Structure formation peculiarities of the interlayer boundaries and wear-resistant layer during two-step sintering of all-pressed bimetallic materials are shown. It is found that for high-temperature sintering by high-frequency (8 or 16 kHz) heating at the second stage, the depth of chromium diffusion from the wear-resistant layer to the matrix is 120–130 μm, and Cr concentration in various points of interlayer and interparticle boundaries varies between 1 and 30 wt.% thus allowing formation of a transition layer with a structure consisting of a ferritic-austenitic matrix with martensitic colonies and dispersed particles of (Cr,Fe)23C6, (Cr,Fe)7C3 and (Cr,Fe)3C2 ferrochromium carbides uniformly distributed over the volume.
The paper justifies the urgency and efficiency of obtaining bimetallic iron-based materials by two-step isothermal sintering to enable forming the structure of the product bases at the first stage and activating diffusion processes in the wear-resistant layer only at the second stage to eliminate any high-porosity areas and brittle inclusions at interlayer boundaries typical for powder materials doped with carbides, nitrides and borides. The analysis of equation solutions for diffusion in two-component heterogeneous powder systems made it possible to propose an option for determining the time and temperature of homogenizing sintering of bimetallic materials taking into account grain-size distribution of powders, concentration and partial diffusion coefficients of components, charge bulk density, initial and final porosity of the products. Experiments proved that bimetallic materials containing 15– 20 wt.% of chromium carbide, 20–25 wt.% of ferrochromium and iron as the rest component in the wear-resistant layer charge have the best combination of hardness, wear resistance and radial compression strength after sintering in a chamber furnace in protective medium at 1150–1180 °C with a holding time of 1,5–2,0 hours at the first stage, and in an induction furnace at 1350– 1370 °C for 25–35 s with a heating rate of 450–470 °C/s at the second stage. Structure formation peculiarities of the interlayer boundaries and wear-resistant layer during two-step sintering of all-pressed bimetallic materials are shown. It is found that for high-temperature sintering by high-frequency (8 or 16 kHz) heating at the second stage, the depth of chromium diffusion from the wear-resistant layer to the matrix is 120–130 μm, and Cr concentration in various points of interlayer and interparticle boundaries varies between 1 and 30 wt.% thus allowing formation of a transition layer with a structure consisting of a ferritic-austenitic matrix with martensitic colonies and dispersed particles of (Cr,Fe)23C6, (Cr,Fe)7C3 and (Cr,Fe)3C2 ferrochromium carbides uniformly distributed over the volume.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.