4 Hardenability
4 Hardenability
4 Hardenability
D E F I N I T I O N, FAC TORS
I N F L U E N C I N G AND C A LC U LATI O N
O F H A R DE N AB I L I TY
2/12/17
Hardenability Jominy End Quench Test
2
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Effect of Grain Size
13
As Austenite transforms to other phases during
cooling, its grain size represents an important
characteristic of steel since all structural components
are formed within each separate crystal.
The smaller the austenite grains, the finer the
network of excess ferrite at their boundaries and the
smaller the pearlite colonies and martensite crystals.
Therefore, a fine grain corresponds to a fine crystal
fracture of steel and vice versa at the temperatures
where austenite has already precipitated.
Impact strength decreases with grain enlargement,
i.e. larger the grain size, lower the impact strength.
A decrease in the dimensions of pearlite colonies
inside the initial austenite grain favors a rise in 2/12/17
Austenite grain size and Hardenability
14
A coarse austenite grain results in a coarse plate
structure of martensite during quenching and during
annealing or normalizing, a coarse cellular network of
ferrite (cementite) forms at the boundary of the initial
austenite grains
The pearlite structure is also the coarser, with larger
the pearlite grains.
A coarse-grain structure of steel (ferritepearlite,
martensite, etc.) is characterized by lower mechanical
properties.
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Austenite Grain Size and Hardenability
15
2/12/17
Effect of Grain Size
16
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Grain size and Grain Boundary
17
Most of structural materials are polycrystalline - they
comprise a set of grains separated by boundaries.
The grain boundary is one of the basic structural
elements in polycrystalline materials and represents an
interface between two differently oriented crystals.
Grain Boundary is the region of crystal imperfection and
is capable of moving and adsorbing impurities, and has
a high diffusive permeability; they determine the
kinetics of many processes.
For example, movement of grain boundaries controls
the process of recrystallization.
Grain boundaries adsorb impurities and thereby cause
embrittlement of metallic materials.
2/12/17
Grain Size: Definition
18
Grain size is normally quantified by a numbering
system: 1-5 - Coarse and fine 5-8.
The number is derived from the formula N=2n-1 where
n is the number of grains per square inch at a
magnification of 100 diameters.
ASTM E 112 is the standard used for Grain Size
determination and covers the three main methods
used, viz. Comparison method, Planimetric method
and Intercept method. The basis of ASTM No. is given
in Annexure 1 of the Standard
Grain size has an important effect on physical
properties.
For service at ordinary temperatures it is considered
that fine grained steels give a better combination 2/12/17
of
Etching for Grain size Determination
19
The grain size is determined from micro sections after
their etching.
For carbon and alloyed steels, the reagent used for
etching is: 15 ml HNO3+100 ml ethyl or methyl
alcohol.
Etching of carbon low-alloy steels results in
darkening of pearlite and improve the visibility of
ferrite grain boundaries, the martensite structure, and
tempering products.
The etching rate rises with the amount of nitric acid.
The etching time is from several seconds to a minute.
Carburization is also used to establish the austenite
grain boundaries. In this case, samples are heated to
930C in a carburizing medium (e.g., a mixture of 2/12/17
Grain Size Determination
20
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Grain size and Hardenability
21
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Austenite Grain Size and Hardenability
23
In usual commercial steels, a grain size of 2025 m
corresponds to standard heating for quenching,
normalization, or annealing. At 12001250C, the
grain size reaches 0.1 mm, and in large forgings and
welds, grains of several millimeters in size occur. In
ingots and castings, grains can be as large as several
centimeters.
In a high alloy steel with austenite stabilizing
elements, the austenite structure is fixed during
cooling to or below room temperature and the steel
grain is equal to the initial austenite grain.
In case of transformation to pearlite, for example, for
a hypereutectoid steel the size of the pearlite colony,
characterized by the same crystallographic 2/12/17
Austenite Grain Size and Hardenability
24
A pearlite colony usually differs in size from an
austenite grain.
Several pearlite colonies are formed in every
austenite grain
The case of the ferritepearlite structure of a
hypoeutectoid steel is also similar, where a network
of excess ferrite is formed at grain boundaries.
This indicates a connection between a grain of a
thermally treated steel and the initial austenite
grain.
When steel is quenched, a large number of
martensite crystals appear in every austenite grain
connected by certain orientation relationships.
For this reason a correlation is easily seen between
2/12/17
Grain Refinement
25
2/12/17
Effect of Austenite Grain Size on
transformation Products
28
This underlines the grain refinement effect when heating
to above Ac3 during full annealing, normalization, or
quenching, followed by recrystallization.
With an initially coarse-grained structure, recrystallization
results in refinement of grains on heating to Ac3
temperature
If the steel is heated to a temperature much higher than
Ac3, the grain growth takes place, and the expected
structure correction transformation does not take place
during the .
Grain refinement is observed when there are many
nucleation sites for transformation to the austenite inside
the initial structure having a random orientation. This is
not connected with the orientation of the -phase in the
initial structure. 2/12/17
Segregation and Hardenability
29
Certain ingot casting and hot reduction practices
may develop localized inhomogeneities within a
given heat, further complicating hardenability
measurements
Segregation of carbon, manganese, and other
elements always occur during ingot pouring and
solidification.
The hardenability of the steel in these segregated
portions will differ from that in the remainder of the
ingot.
Specimens from the top of the ingot have higher
hardenability than steel from the middle, and
specimens from the bottom of the ingot will have
lower hardenability than from the middle. 2/12/17
Specifying a Steel with Desired
Hardenability
30
2/12/17
As Quenched Hardness Versus
Tempered Hardness
31
Hardness, HRC
As quenched
Martensite
%
2/12/17
Steel Selection based on Hardenability
33
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Selection of Depth of Hardening
34
The cost of a component depends on the desired
hardenability and therefore on the depth and
percentage of martensite to which parts are hardened,
which in turn affects its serviceability.
Hardening to 80% martensite at three-quarter-radius of
the part as finished may be sufficient in parts not highly
stressed in bending; in some parts, which are designed
for low deflection under load, and the exterior regions
are only moderately stressed, required depth may be
even less.
For some parts loaded principally in tension and others
operating at high hardness levels, such as springs of all
types, through hardening is done.
In automobile leaf springs, the leaves are designed with
a low section modulus in the direction of loading. The2/12/17
Hardenability Vs Carbon content
35
Figure shows
approximate
relationship between
hardness in HRC and
carbon content for
different percentages
of Martensite.
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Hardenability Influencing Factors
36
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Hardenability Influencing Factors
38
Correlation
between
rectangular
cross sections
and their
equivalent
round
sections,
according to
ISO
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Hardenability Influencing Factors
41
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Hardenability Depth of Hardening
42
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Hardenability Depth of Hardening
43
crit -
critical
cooling
rate
2/12/17
Hardenability Size and Quench
conditions
44
The critical cooling rate (crit) of the unalloyed steel
is higher, resulting in martensite transformation
martensite and high hardness only in a part of the
cross section having higher cooling rate.
This can be achieved up to some depth only by
quenching in water (curve a); oil quenching (curve
b) provides essentially no hardness increase.
Alloy steel quenched in water (because of the high
cooling rate) has a cooling rate greater than crit
even in the core, resulting in through-hardening.
Oil quenching (curve b) provides cooling rates
higher than crit within quite a large depth of
hardening. Only the core region remains unchanged.
2/12/17
Hardenability Grossmann Factor
45
In Grossmanns method of testing hardenability, a
number of cylindrical steel bars of different diameters
are hardened in a given quenching medium.
After sectioning each bar at mid diameter and
examining it metallographically, the bar that has 50%
martensite at its center is selected, and the diameter
of this bar is designated as the critical diameter (Dcrit).
The hardness value at exactly the centre of the bar of
Dcrit corresponds to 50% martensite.
Bars with diameters smaller than Dcrit have more than
50% martensite in the center of the cross section and
higher hardness, while bars having diameters larger
than Dcrit attain 50% martensite only up to a certain
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depth.
Hardenability Grossmanns factor
46
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Ideal Critical Diameter
48
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Quenching Intensity and Critical Diameter
50
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Quenching Intensity and Critical Diameter
51
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Ideal Critical Diameter
52
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Determination of Critical Diameter
53
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Calculation of DI Values
54
Multiplying
factors for
different
alloying
elements
when
calculating
hardenability
as
DI value,
according to
AISI
2/12/17
Calculation of DI Values
55
Multiplying
factors for
calculation
hardenabilit
y of high-
carbon
steels of
prior
normalized
structure.
2/12/17
Calculation of DI Values
56
Multiplyin
g factors
for
calculatio
n of
hardenabi
lity of
high-
carbon
steels of
prior
Spheroidiz
e-
annealed 2/12/17
Calculation of DI Values
57
The basic hardenability of the steel as a function of
carbon content and austenite grain size is calculated
from the chart (Slide 54) according to the weight
percent of each element present.
If a steel has an austenite grain size of ASTM 7 and
the chemical composition C 0.25%, Si 0.3%, Mn 0.7%,
Cr 1.1%, Mo 0.2%, then the basic value of
hardenability from Slide 52 (inches) is DI = 0.17.
The total hardenability of this steel is DI = 0.17 x1.2
x 3.3 x 3.4 x 1.6 = 3.7 in.
For these calculations, it is presumed that the total
amount of each element is in solution at the
austenitizing temperature.
Therefore the diagrams in Slides 55 and 56 are 2/12/17
Calculation of DI Values
58
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Hardenability - Medium Carbon Steels
62
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Hardenability High Carbon Steels
67
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Hardenability High Carbon Steels
69
In spheroidize-annealed steel, the carbides are
present as large spheroids, which are much more
difficult to dissolve during heating for hardening.
The alloy and carbon dissolution is less in case of a
spheroidized compared to a normalized or
quenched microstructure.
With spheroidized prior microstructure, higher
hardenability is possible than a prior normalized
microstructure, at least for austenitizing
temperatures up to approximately 855oC.
This is due to larger carbides are not as efficient
nuclei for early pearlite formation upon cooling as
fine and lamellar carbides and the nuclei are
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present in lower numbers.
Hardenability High Carbon Steels
70
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Jominy End Quench Test
71
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Jominy End Quench Test
72
Heat the steel test specimen (25 mm diameter, 100
mm length) to the appropriate austenitizing
temperature and soak for 30 min.
Then quickly transfer to the supporting fixture (Jominy
apparatus) and quench from the lower end by
spraying with a jet of water under specified conditions
as illustrated in next slide.
The cooling rate is the highest at the end where the
water jet impinges on the specimen and decreases
from the quenched end, producing a variety of
microstructures and hardnesses as a function of
distance from the quenched end.
After quenching, grind two parallel flats,
approximately 0.45 mm below surface, on opposite 2/12/17
Jominy Test for Hardenability
Hardenability--Steels
74
flat ground
Specimen
(heated to
phase field) Rockwell C
hardness tests
24C water
Hardness Changes with distance from
quenched end
The cooling rate varies with position.
Hardness, HRC
60
40
20
0 1 2 3 Distance from quenched end (in)
T(C) 0%
600 100%
400
M(start)
200
A M
Pe ine ens
F
0 ar P ite
M ten
M
M(finish) lite ea +
ar sit
ar
rli Pe
e
te ar
75
Jominy End Quench Test
76
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Effects of Jominy Test Parameters
77
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Jominy Hardenability Curves
81
2/12/17
Jominy End Quench Test -
Reproducibility
82
2/12/17
Use of Jominy End Quench Test
83
The Jominy end-quench test is used mostly for low-alloy steels for
carburizing (core hardenability) and for structural steels, which are
typically through-hardened in oils and tempered.
The Jominy end-quench test is suitable for all steels except those of
very low or very high hardenability, i.e., D 1<1.0 in. or D1>6.0in.
The standard Jominy end-quench test cannot be used for highly
alloyed air-hardened steels.
These steels harden not only by heat extraction through the
quenched end but also by heat extraction by the surrounding air.
This effect increases with increasing distance from quenched end.
Softwares are now available to calculate Jominy Hardenability
Curves (Jominy Hardenability Band)
2/12/17
Limitations of Jominy End Quench Test
84
The quenching medium influences cooling rate due to
varying thermal conductivities and specific heats.
Liquid quenchants such as brine, water or oil produce
much higher cooling rates than air quenching.
Eliminating two of the three phases of liquid quenching
(vapor and vapor-transport phases) and cooling only via
conduction can reduce distortion to a large extent.
Near net-shaped parts and higher-alloyed steels are
hardened mainly by gas quenching within vacuum
furnaces.
It is necessary to adapt Jominy end quench tests to take
care of cooling parameters within vacuum furnaces
continue to increase due to such factors as increased
gas velocities, increased pressures, various pedigrees of
2/12/17
gases and better fan designs.
H - Steels
85
Certain steels have hardenability requirements in
addition to the limits and ranges of chemical
composition.
For alloy steels that have specific hardenability
requirements, the suffix H is used to distinguish
these steels from similar grades that have no
hardenability requirement.
Limits and ranges of chemical composition for all
carbon steel products reflect the restrictions on
heat and product analyses.
The allowable composition ranges of H-steels are
slightly wider than those of steels melted to
composition specifications in order to 2/12/17
Using the Hardenability Curves
86
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88
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89
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90
2/12/17
Hardenability Alloy Steels
91
2/12/17
Hardenability Alloy Steels
96
Secondly, the alloying elements in quenching
permit slower rates of cooling for a given section
because of increased hardenability.
This reduces thermal gradient and the cooling
stresses.
This is not altogether advantageous, because the
direction and the magnitude of the stress existing
after the quench is important in relation to
cracking.
To avoid cracking, surface stresses after
quenching should be either compressive or at a
relatively low tensile level.
The use of a less drastic quench suited to the 2/12/17
Austempering
97
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Brinell Hardness and Tensile Strength
101
2/12/17
Relationship between BHN, Yield and Tensile Strengths
102
2/12/17
Effect of Tempering
103
1700(245)
480
(ksi)
240
800(1150)
Reduction in area,
% 2/12/17
Some important Aspects in Hardening
105