Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1789145 Current Applied Physics 2009 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

Fe–Si alloys are of significant commercial and academic interests, due to the large diversity of their physical properties. In practice, alloy powders are unsuitable because of their hardness, poor compactibility and resulting excessive tool wear. Therefore the powder mixture route is suitable as alloying technique. The properties of the Fe–Si sintered materials depend strongly on the influence of the element Si and content of it, which influence mainly the compactibility and the sintering behaviour as well as sintering parameters such as the optimum temperature. In this study, Cr–Mo prealloyed steel powders with different Si contents were prepared by powder mixture route. Mixed powders compacted under pressing pressure of 600 MPa, and then sintered at 1120 and 1250 °C. It was found out that in Si alloyed Cr–Mo steels sintered at higher temperatures such as 1250 °C, an intermediate liquid phase appeared and caused extreme shrinkage and distortion, but strongly accelerated sintering and had a beneficial effect also on homogenization.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Physics and Astronomy Condensed Matter Physics
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