Izvestiya Vuzov Poroshkovaya Metallurgiya i Funktsional’nye Pokrytiya (Universitiesʹ Proceedings Powder Metallurgy аnd Functional Coatings)
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Published By National University Of Science And Technology Misis

2412-8767, 1997-308x

Author(s):  
B. G. Gasanov ◽  
A. A. Aganov ◽  
P. V. Sirotin

The paper describes main methods for assessing the deformed state of porous body metal frames developed by different authors based on the analysis of yield conditions and governing equations, using the principle of equivalent strains and stresses, and studying the kinetics of metal strain during pressing. Formulas were derived to determine the components of the powder particle material strain tensor through dyads, as scalar products of the basis vectors of the convected coordinate system at each moment of porous molding strain. The expediency of using the analytical expressions developed to determine the deformed state of the particle material was experimentally substantiated subject to the known displacement vector parameters of representative elements (macrostrains) of porous billets. The applications of well-known analytical expressions were established, and the proposed formulas proved applicable for the deformed state assessment of particle metal during the pressure processing of powder products of different configurations and designing billets with a defined porosity and geometric parameters as a basis for compiling software algorithms for the computer simulation of porous molding hot stamping.


Author(s):  
P. P. Sharin ◽  
M. P. Akimova ◽  
S. N. Makharova ◽  
S. P. Yakovleva ◽  
V. I. Popov

The study covers the structure, elemental and phase composition of products formed in the contact interaction between diamond and low-carbon steel in vacuum at the Fe–C eutectic melting temperature. Cylindrical tablets made of low carbon steel with a maximum carbon content of 0.1 wt.% and natural diamond crystals in the form of a pyramid (or truncated pyramid) were used as contact pairs. The flat bases of diamond crystals were mounted on the horizontal surface of steel tablets with the load applied to the top of diamond crystals. Contact samples were sintered in a vacuum furnace at a maximum heating temperature of ~1165 °C. After holding at this temperature for 5 minutes, the furnace was turned off and the temperature in its chamber decreased in free cooling mode. Sintered diamond/steel tablet samples were studied by optical and scanning electron microscopy, X-ray diffraction analysis and Raman spectroscopy. It was found that the Fe–C eutectic melt forms in the diamond/steel tablet contact zone, a thin layer of which, when solidified, welds a diamond crystal to the steel tablet under the temperature-time heating mode specified in the experiment. Their bonding strength is such that welded samples without separation can withstand intense cyclic loads during grinding and polishing when making longitudinal sections of samples necessary for metallographic studies. It was shown that the Fe–C eutectic alloy is a gray cast iron with a ferrite-perlite metal base and lamellar graphite inclusions. The microhardness of the solidified Fe–C eutectic was ~1714 MPa. The initial steel tablet with a ferrite-perlite structure was subjected to cementation during sintering in contact with diamond. The most intensive cementation occurred in the ~110 μm thick unmelted upper layer of the steel tablet, which adjoined the Fe–C eutectic during sintering. The microhardness of this layer was ~4945 MPa. As it deepens into the steel tablet there is a gradual transition of the perlite-cementite structure to a perlite one and further to the initial ferrite-perlite microstructure inwards the steel tablet. At the same time, the microhardness changes from ~ 4945 to 1570 MPa.


Author(s):  
Yu. V. Bogatov ◽  
V. A. Shcherbakov ◽  
I. D. Kovalev

The paper studies the effect of mechanical activation (MA) modes when stirring a stoichiometric mixture of titanium and soot powders in a ball mill on the properties of mixtures, combustion parameters, relative density, and the microstructure of consolidated titanium carbide samples obtained by SHS. MA conditions for Ti + C reaction mixtures in a ball mill were determined. An increase in the mass of grinding bodies activates the MA mechanism. It was shown that the greatest effect from MA was obtained with a two-stage preparation of mixtures: firstly, the titanium powder was activated separately, then the components were mixed together, and this process included not only their mixing, but also soot powder activation. It was found that combustion behavior is affected by the activation of not only titanium, but also soot. After MA of both components, an anomalous increase in the burning rate (more than 100 cm/s) was found on pressed samples. At the bulk density, there was no effect of MA on the mixture combustion process, since in this case the burning rate of all mixtures was in the range of 1.5–2.5 cm/s. It was revealed that MA of reagents for pressed samples leads to an increase in the combustion temperature, an increase in the relative density of the consolidated refractory product to 93–95 %, and a decrease in the average size of TiC grains. A decrease in the residual porosity of consolidated TiC is due to an increase in the hot pressing temperature and plasticity of the product synthesized during the reaction mixture combustion after MA. The main reason is an increase in the exothermic interaction rate. It was shown that MA when mixing reagents makes it possible to control combustion parameters, the microstructure of consolidated products and opens up new opportunities for obtaining refractory materials featuring a unique structure and properties by SHS pressing.


Author(s):  
S. G. Vadchenko ◽  
E. V. Suvorova ◽  
N. I. Mukhina ◽  
I. D. Kovalev ◽  
E. V. Illarionova

The microstructures of alloys formed during the sintering of tungsten powder mixtures (PV2, 3.8–6.0 μm average particle size) and copper (PMS-11, 45–60 μm fraction) prepared by various methods were compared. The methods included simple metal powder mixing, mechanical activation (MA) of metal powders, copper precipitation from the solution of its sulfate (CuSO4·5H2O) on tungsten powder with simultaneous mechanical activation. The molar ratio of metals in mixtures Cu/W = 1. An aqueous solution for copper deposition included diethylene glycol (up to 30 %), glycerin (up to 8 %), hydrofluoric acid (up to 0.1 %), wetting agent OP-10 (up to 0.8 %). Mechanical activation was carried out in an AGO-2 planetary mill with 200 g of steel balls charged into the drums rotating at 2220 rpm for 5 min. Reduced copper in the solution and in the air rapidly oxidizes to the Cu2O oxide, so the composite powders obtained were washed, dried, and stored in an argon atmosphere. Samples pressed from the powders obtained (tablets 3 mm in diameter, 1.5–2.0 mm in height with a density of 7.7–8.0 g/cm3) were sintered in argon at atmospheric pressure and temperatures from 1000 to 1500 °C. During the sintering of Cu–W composite particles, several areas of the process can be distinguished. «Solid phase» sintering occurs at the contact points of composite particles at temperatures lower than the copper melting point. When samples are heated from the melting point to 1200 °C, samples are sintered by the liquid-phase mechanism from the conventional mixture of metal powders to form a low-porous cake. When composite powders obtained by MA during the copper deposition and MA of metal powder mixtures are sintered, samples are delaminated with the formation of large pores elongated perpendicular to the pressing axis and partially filled with copper melt. When samples obtained by powder MA are heated above 1400 °C, phase separation occurs and almost all copper is displaced from the sample to the surface.


Author(s):  
S. I. Bogodukhov ◽  
E. S. Kozik ◽  
E. V. Svidenko

Hard alloys are popular materials widely used in the toolmaking industry. Refractory carbides included in their composition make carbide tools very hard (80 to 92 HRA) and heat-resistant (800 to 1000 °С) so as they can be used at cutting speeds several times higher than those used for high-speed steels. However, hard alloys differ from the latter by lower strength (1000 to 1500 MPa) and the absence of impact strength, and this constitutes an urgent problem. We studied the influence of thermal cycling modes on the mechanical and tribological properties of VK8 (WC–8Co) hard alloy used in the manufacture of cutters and cutting inserts for metal working on metal-cutting machines. As the object of study, we selected 5×5×35 mm billets made of VK8 (WC–8Co) alloy manufactured by powder metallurgy methods at Dimitrovgrad Tool Plant. The following criteria were selected for heat treatment mode evaluation: Vickers hardness, flexural strength, and mass wear resistance (as compared to the wear of asreceived samples that were not heat treated). Plates in the initial state and after heat treatment were subjected to abrasion tests. Wear results were evaluated by the change in the mass of plates. Regularities of the influence of various time and temperature conditions of heat treatment on the tribological properties of products made of VK group tungsten hard alloys were determined. An increase in the number of thermal cycling cycles improved such mechanical properties of the VK8 hard alloy as strength and hardness. When repeating the cycles five times, an increase in abrasive wear resistance was obtained compared to the initial nonheat-treated sample. The elemental composition of the VK8 hard alloy changed insignificantly after thermal cycling, only a slight increase in oxygen was observed on the surface of plates. The grain size after thermal cycling increased in comparison with the initial VK8 hard alloy. It was found that VK8 hard alloy thermocyclic treatment leads to a change in the phase composition. X-ray phase analysis showed the presence of a large amount of α-Co with an hcp-type lattice on the surface of a hard alloy and a solid solution of WC in α-Co. A change in the cobalt modification ratio causes a decrease in microstresses. An analysis of the carbide phase structure state showed that the size of crystallites and microstresses changed after thermal cycling. The lattice constant of the cobalt cubic solid solution decreased, which may indicate a decrease in the amount of tungsten carbide and carbon dissolved in it. Statistical processing of experimental results included the calculation of the average value of the mechanical property, its dispersion and standard deviation in the selected confidence interval.


Author(s):  
S. E. Porozova ◽  
V. B. Kul’met’eva ◽  
T. Yu. Pozdeeva ◽  
V. O. Shokov

A comparative analysis of agglomerates obtained by spray drying and granulation methods and consolidated materials based on them was carried out. The paper provides the results obtained when studying zirconia nanopowders granulated in water medium with an agar agar additive obtained by chemical precipitation with zirconia partially stabilized by yttrium oxide (2.5 mol.%), and TZ-3Y-E powder manufactured by Tosoh Corp. (Japan) that was prepared by spray drying. Agglomerates as well as microsections and fractures of samples were studied by scanning electron, optical, atomic force microscopy, and Raman spectroscopy. The crack resistance coefficient (K1с) of samples was determined by indenting the polished surface of microsections with a Vickers pyramid. The specific surface of the powders measured by nitrogen thermal desorption during granulation remains unchanged indicating a significant open porosity of agglomerates obtained. With increasing compacting pressure under conditions of semi-dry compaction with an aqueous solution of PVA as a binder, agglomerates and even aggregates of granulated powders are destroyed, K1с increases with increasing compaction pressure and the accompanying material microstructure grinding. Powders agglomerated using spray drying break up much less intensively, K1с does not change with increasing pressure. The studies conducted allow us to agree with the authors pointing to the fractal nature of agglomerates obtained from chemically precipitated nanopowders without the use of spray drying. The use of granulated nanopowders in semi-dry compaction with the application of high pressures makes it possible to destroy not only agglomerates, but also aggregates, and to obtain nanostructured ceramics with grain sizes close to the size of initial particles.


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