Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1663578 | Surface and Coatings Technology | 2006 | 9 Pages |
Abstract
Laser surface alloying (LSA) of mild steel AISI 1050 using aluminum alloy (AlFeSi) was attempted. LSA was conducted by a two-step process: the alloy powder was preplaced on the surface of the substrate by flame spraying and the preplaced layer was subsequently remelted using a 2.5-kW CW Nd:YAG laser beam. The microstructures of the alloyed layers were studied by scanning electron microscopy and X-ray diffractometry. The corrosion and cavitation erosion characteristics in 3.5% NaCl solution at 23 °C were studied by potentiodynamic polarization technique and by means of a 20-kHz ultrasonic vibratory facility, respectively. The laser-aluminized layer was found to consist of a ferritic matrix reinforced with the intermetallic phases Fe3Al, FeAl, and tiny amount of Fe2Al5. The maximum hardness achieved was 595 Hv. The cavitation erosion resistance of the laser-aluminized specimens was much higher than that of the substrate (about 17 times) due to the presence of Fe3Al, FeAl, and solid solution hardened α-ferrite. Although alloying of aluminum to the steel led to an active shift in the free corrosion potential from â610 mV to â880 mV, the specimens showed passivity with pitting and protection potentials of â650 mV and â717 mV, respectively, while the steel substrate did not. The corrosion resistance of the specimens was significantly improved after laser aluminization as evidenced by a much lower corrosion current density.
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Authors
C.T. Kwok, F.T. Cheng, H.C. Man,