Metal-Heat Treatment

 

 

 
 
 
 
Ferrous-Metal  

Heat Treatment of Ferrous Metals

 

 

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The first important consideration in the heat treatment of a steel part is to know its chemical composition.  This, in turn, determines its upper critical point.  When the upper critical point is known,  the next consideration is the rate of heating and cooling to be used.  Carrying out these operations involves the use of uniform heating furnaces, proper temperature controls, and suitable quenching mediums.

Behavior of Steel During Heating and Cooling

 

    Changing the internal structure of a ferrous metal is accomplished by heating to a temperature above its upper critical point, holding it at that temperature for a time sufficient to permit certain internal changes to occur, and then cooling to atmospheric temperature under predetermined, controlled conditions

 

 

 

Heat treatment Process

Heat Treatment Furnace

Quenching Process

Solution Heat Treatment Metal

Quenching Process Steel

Cooling System of Heat Treatment

 

Precipitation of Hardening

Heat Treatment of Titanium

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Aluminum Alloys

Heat Treatment of Magnesium

 
   

At ordinary temperatures, the carbon in steel exist in the form of particles of iron carbide scattered throughout an iron matrix known as "ferrite."  The number, size, and distribution of these particles determine the hardness of the steel.  At elevated temperatures, the carbon is dissolved in the iron matrix in the form of a solid solution called " austenite," and the carbide particles appear only after the steel has been cooled.  If the cooling is slow, the carbide particles are relatively coarse and few.  In this condition, the steel is soft.   If the cooling is rapid, as by quenching in oil or water, the carbon precipitates as a cloud of very fine carbide particles, and the steel is hard.  The fact that the carbide particles can be dissolved in austenite is the basis of the heat treatment of steel.  The temperatures at which this transformation takes place are called the critical points and vary with the composition of the steel.  The element normally having the greatest influence is carbon.

 

 

 

 
 
 
  • Heat Treatment of Ferrous Metals
 
 

 

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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