Various gas-quenching processes, including marquenching, were investigated to optimize gas-quenching processes in terms of distortion and hardness by means of numerical and experimental analyses. The temperature, microstructure, hardness, and distortion… Click to show full abstract
Various gas-quenching processes, including marquenching, were investigated to optimize gas-quenching processes in terms of distortion and hardness by means of numerical and experimental analyses. The temperature, microstructure, hardness, and distortion during the various gas-quenching processes of a tool steel block were simulated using a finite element method based on a coupled thermo-metallurgical–mechanical model. The predicted temperature, hardness, and distortion agreed well with the experimental data. The tool steel block (200 × 150 × 70 mm3) quenched under 10 bar pressure of nitrogen gas (Case 2) had higher hardness due to the higher martensite fraction and larger distortion owing to the higher thermal stress induced by faster cooling, compared to the block quenched under 2 bar pressure of nitrogen gas (Case 1). The tool steel block marquenched under 10 bar pressure of nitrogen gas interrupted by isothermal holding at 500 °C (Case 3) had 30% smaller distortion with a negligible loss of hardness compared to Case 2. Furthermore, the simulation results could provide an optimized process condition to minimize distortion of the gas-quenched tool steel block while satisfying the hardness requirement.
               
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