Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing

By the methods of modern physical materials science, the structure, phase composition, defect substructure, and tribological properties of the coating formed on low-carbon Hardox 450 steel by electric arc surfacing of powder Fe–C–Nb–Cr–W wire and modified by subsequent irradiation with high-intensit...

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Main Author: V. E. Kormyshev, V. E. Gromov, Yu. F. Ivanov, S. V. Konovalov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: G. V. Kurdyumov Institute for Metal Physics of the N.A.S. of Ukraine 2017-06-01
Series:Успехи физики металлов
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.15407/ufm.18.02.111
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spelling doaj-9ed006623916410a8121a68e569341b92020-11-25T03:39:33ZengG. V. Kurdyumov Institute for Metal Physics of the N.A.S. of UkraineУспехи физики металлов 1608-10212617-07952017-06-0118211113910.15407/ufm.18.02.111Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam ProcessingV. E. Kormyshev, V. E. Gromov, Yu. F. Ivanov, S. V. KonovalovBy the methods of modern physical materials science, the structure, phase composition, defect substructure, and tribological properties of the coating formed on low-carbon Hardox 450 steel by electric arc surfacing of powder Fe–C–Nb–Cr–W wire and modified by subsequent irradiation with high-intensity pulsed electron beams are studied. In the initial state, Hardox 450 steel has the structure of packet morphology martensite formed during low-temperature tempering. The surfacing results in the formation of high-strength layer with thickness of above 6 mm and with microhardness of ≈ 10.5 GPa that is 1.7 times higher than microhardness of the substrate. Along the surfacing–steel interface, the structure is formed, in which sizes of the grains vary within the range of 30–50 µm. With distance from the in-terface to the steel bulk, the grain size decreases and amounts 5–7 µm for the distance of 1.0–1.2 mm. In the bulk of martensite crystals, the dislocation substructure is observed in a form of multilayer nets with scalar dislocation density of ≈ 1⋅1011 cm−2. Niobium carbide particles, whose sizes vary as 0.2–1.5 µm, constitute the main strengthening phase of the surfaced layer. In the transition-layer structure, the formation of special carbide particles is revealed, namely, chromium carbides (Cr3C2 and Cr7C3), carbide of complex composition М23С6 ((Fe,Cr)23C6) and, rather rarely, WC tungsten carbide. The particles of special carbides are located in the bulk and at the boundaries of martensite crystals, and they have a round shape; the particle sizes vary within the range of 30–50 nm. The cellular type structure is formed on the surface of the surfaced layer as a result of irradiation by intensive pulsed electron beam. The sizes of cells vary within the range of 20–100 μm. The extended interlayers separate the cells. The cells have submicro- or nanocrystalline structure, the characteristic sizes of which vary within the range from 100 nm to 1 µm. Electron-beam treatment of the surfaced layer results in decrease in grain sizes to 1.5–2.0 μm. The strengthening phases of the surfacing layer are α-phase (martensite), niobium carbides, iron of the Fe3C and M6C(Fe3W3C). It is established that wear resistance of the surfaced layer is increased by more than 70 times after the electron-beam treatment as compared with that for the initial steel, while the friction coefficient is decreased by ≈ 3 times.https://doi.org/10.15407/ufm.18.02.111
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author V. E. Kormyshev, V. E. Gromov, Yu. F. Ivanov, S. V. Konovalov
spellingShingle V. E. Kormyshev, V. E. Gromov, Yu. F. Ivanov, S. V. Konovalov
Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing
Успехи физики металлов
author_facet V. E. Kormyshev, V. E. Gromov, Yu. F. Ivanov, S. V. Konovalov
author_sort V. E. Kormyshev, V. E. Gromov, Yu. F. Ivanov, S. V. Konovalov
title Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing
title_short Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing
title_full Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing
title_fullStr Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing
title_full_unstemmed Structure and Properties of the Wear-Resistant Facing Modified by Electron-Beam Processing
title_sort structure and properties of the wear-resistant facing modified by electron-beam processing
publisher G. V. Kurdyumov Institute for Metal Physics of the N.A.S. of Ukraine
series Успехи физики металлов
issn 1608-1021
2617-0795
publishDate 2017-06-01
description By the methods of modern physical materials science, the structure, phase composition, defect substructure, and tribological properties of the coating formed on low-carbon Hardox 450 steel by electric arc surfacing of powder Fe–C–Nb–Cr–W wire and modified by subsequent irradiation with high-intensity pulsed electron beams are studied. In the initial state, Hardox 450 steel has the structure of packet morphology martensite formed during low-temperature tempering. The surfacing results in the formation of high-strength layer with thickness of above 6 mm and with microhardness of ≈ 10.5 GPa that is 1.7 times higher than microhardness of the substrate. Along the surfacing–steel interface, the structure is formed, in which sizes of the grains vary within the range of 30–50 µm. With distance from the in-terface to the steel bulk, the grain size decreases and amounts 5–7 µm for the distance of 1.0–1.2 mm. In the bulk of martensite crystals, the dislocation substructure is observed in a form of multilayer nets with scalar dislocation density of ≈ 1⋅1011 cm−2. Niobium carbide particles, whose sizes vary as 0.2–1.5 µm, constitute the main strengthening phase of the surfaced layer. In the transition-layer structure, the formation of special carbide particles is revealed, namely, chromium carbides (Cr3C2 and Cr7C3), carbide of complex composition М23С6 ((Fe,Cr)23C6) and, rather rarely, WC tungsten carbide. The particles of special carbides are located in the bulk and at the boundaries of martensite crystals, and they have a round shape; the particle sizes vary within the range of 30–50 nm. The cellular type structure is formed on the surface of the surfaced layer as a result of irradiation by intensive pulsed electron beam. The sizes of cells vary within the range of 20–100 μm. The extended interlayers separate the cells. The cells have submicro- or nanocrystalline structure, the characteristic sizes of which vary within the range from 100 nm to 1 µm. Electron-beam treatment of the surfaced layer results in decrease in grain sizes to 1.5–2.0 μm. The strengthening phases of the surfacing layer are α-phase (martensite), niobium carbides, iron of the Fe3C and M6C(Fe3W3C). It is established that wear resistance of the surfaced layer is increased by more than 70 times after the electron-beam treatment as compared with that for the initial steel, while the friction coefficient is decreased by ≈ 3 times.
url https://doi.org/10.15407/ufm.18.02.111
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