Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
618940 Wear 2009 10 Pages PDF
Abstract
The concept of hard particles in a softer metal matrix has long appealed to number of industries dealing among others with drilling and mining. For these facilities, the PTA (Plasma Transferred Arc) alloying technique is advisable and advantageous for several reasons; the equipment may be portable and moved near the working site, the treatment may be applied strictly to the area where the wear problem is situated and after the treatment little machining is required. Four different coatings are tested against three different modes of wear occurring either alone or less frequently combined in this kind of applications, i.e. adhesion, low stress abrasion and two-body abrasion. Two of the coatings examined belong to the category of tool steels with very hard carbides in their microstructure, namely TiC, M2C and M6C. The other two are boride coatings belonging to the Fe-B and Fe-Cr-B system respectively. A heat treated AISI D2 tool steel commonly used in this type of applications is also examined for comparison. Fe-Cr-B coating performance is at least 2 times better in low stress and two-body abrasion and four orders of magnitude better in adhesion wear than the AISI D2 tool steel. Fe-B coating can be used in pure adhesion or abrasion situations, but their brittleness forbids their use in situations involving impact loading. AISI M2 coating presents similar wear performance with AISI D2 tool steel in abrasion, whereas in adhesion wear it performs at least two orders of magnitude better. MMC-TiC coating has good performance in pure two-body abrasion situations due to the presence of the very hard TiC particles in its microstructure.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemical Engineering Colloid and Surface Chemistry
Authors
, ,