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WO1990002015A1 - Forming hard facings on materials - Google Patents

Forming hard facings on materials Download PDF

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Publication number
WO1990002015A1
WO1990002015A1 PCT/GB1989/000983 GB8900983W WO9002015A1 WO 1990002015 A1 WO1990002015 A1 WO 1990002015A1 GB 8900983 W GB8900983 W GB 8900983W WO 9002015 A1 WO9002015 A1 WO 9002015A1
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WO
WIPO (PCT)
Prior art keywords
stack
plates
edge
substrate
hard
Prior art date
Application number
PCT/GB1989/000983
Other languages
French (fr)
Inventor
Gerald Montgomery Bedford
Original Assignee
Frictec Limited
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Frictec Limited filed Critical Frictec Limited
Publication of WO1990002015A1 publication Critical patent/WO1990002015A1/en

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C26/00Coating not provided for in groups C23C2/00 - C23C24/00
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B23MACHINE TOOLS; METAL-WORKING NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • B23KSOLDERING OR UNSOLDERING; WELDING; CLADDING OR PLATING BY SOLDERING OR WELDING; CUTTING BY APPLYING HEAT LOCALLY, e.g. FLAME CUTTING; WORKING BY LASER BEAM
    • B23K20/00Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating
    • B23K20/12Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating the heat being generated by friction; Friction welding
    • B23K20/1215Non-electric welding by applying impact or other pressure, with or without the application of heat, e.g. cladding or plating the heat being generated by friction; Friction welding for other purposes than joining, e.g. built-up welding

Definitions

  • This invention relates to the formation of hard facings along edges of materials by friction surfacing.
  • British Patent Specification No. 572 789 (Hans Klopstock) describes a method for joining metals, in which a rotating rod or bar of weld metal is fed into contact with the metal part or parts to be treated, with such continuity of pressure and at such speed of relative movement with respect thereto, that the frictional heat generated causes the end of the rod or bar and the metal to attain welding temperature.
  • the result is that the metal of the rod or bar becomes deposited on the metal under treatment, so as to form a local enlargement or to join two juxtaposed metal parts together, or to fill in blowholes or the like.
  • the coating is formed in a recessed edge of the substrate, on a major face thereof, and gives rise to coatings the thickness of which is more than 0.2 mm and typically 0.2 to 2.0 mm, which is thick enough for the coating to be subsequently machined flat prior to being given a sharp edge.
  • the plates may be of carbon or stainless steel or other metal. They may typically be laminae intended for scalpel or knife blades or the like. The plates may be upwards of 0.5 mm thick.
  • This invention provides a method for applying a hard facing along an edge of a substrate which comprises mechanically depositing, by means of rotatory friction surfacing treatment, an applied layer of a relatively hard coating material along -the substrate edge, wherein the method includes the steps of (A) clamping together a stack of plates to form the substrate, (B) depositing the said hard material by rotatory friction surfacing along an edge of the stack, and (C) splitting the resulting treated stack into individual plates, each having bonded along one of its edges a generally coplanar applied layer of the said hard material.
  • the invention also provides a metal plate (as defined above) at least 0.5 mm thick, having bonded along one edge, by the method of the invention, an applied layer of a relatively hard material about 0.2 to 2.0 mm thick and extending from and lying in the major plane of the plate.
  • a metal plate as defined above
  • an applied layer of a relatively hard material about 0.2 to 2.0 mm thick and extending from and lying in the major plane of the plate.
  • the mechtrode material transferred from the end of the rotating sacrificial mechtrode used in the friction surfacing process , may become poorly bonded to the substrate metal. If they are not level, then: (a) the coating of mechtrode material will be uneven as between different plates , or between different regions of the individual plates; (b) substrate material of plates that are higher than the adjacent plates may become rolled over on to the adjacent plates, and (c) inadequately supported plates may be unable to withstand the pressures needed for mechtrode deposition, and may become bent. To avoid these difficulties, it is desirable to machine the upper and lower surfaces of the assembled stack, e.g. by milling or grinding, so that they are clean, true and level before the friction surfacing operation is undertaken. The surfaces of the supporting block must also be true and level so that there is no gap between any of the individual plates and the adjacent surface of the supporting block.
  • step (B) the stack of plates is held wholly within the bite of the jaws of the vice or other clamping means in which it is retained.
  • the mechtrode can push the individual plates apart.
  • the individual plates especially if they are thin blades, cannot otherwise withstand the forming pressure of the mechtrode, which would then penetrate the stack.
  • the clamping force is effective at the upper and lower edges of the stack, and separation of the plate during the friction surfacing process can be avoided. It has been found that the upper edge of the stack can be located about 5 to 10 mm below the upper edge of the clamping jaws.
  • a preferred remedy is to form a weld- inhibiting coating on the major faces of each plate, at least adjacent to the edges to be friction surfaced, when preparing the plates before stacking them together for clamping.
  • a weld-inhibiting coating may conveniently be of iron oxide formed by oxidation. The metal of each plate in the stack is thus separated from that of its neighbours by layers of iron oxide which inhibit diffusion bonding.
  • splitting of the stack into individual plates involves breaking the applied layer along the interface between each plate and the next, so that on each plate, the sides of the hardfacing layer are substantially coplanar with the major surfaces of the plate.
  • the stack is preferably cooled, immediately prior to the splitting operation, down to a temperature such as to assist easy and clean splitting, the splitting itself then being carried out while the stack is still at this reduced temperature.
  • This temperature i ⁇ preferably below the ductile/brittle transition temperature, if any, of the substrate and/or applied layer material.
  • Such cooling is for example carried out by immersing the stack in liquid nitrogen for an appropriate period such as 20 minutes. It is of advantage where the substrates are of, for example, steel other than stainless steel, and/or the applied layer is of Tl high speed steel .
  • mechtrode load i.e. relative linear velocity between the mechtrode and the pack
  • table speed i.e. relative linear velocity between the mechtrode and the pack
  • This will depend on the diameter of the mechtrode and the materials of the mechtrode and substrate plates . The particular conditions needed will thus vary depending on the materials being used. For a given pressure applied by the mechtrode, too fast a table speed will not give the intended coating thickness, whereas too slow a coating speed will give a coating which is too thick and of irregular profile. Too fast a rotational speed can lead to a coating thinner than intended, whereas too slow a rotational speed can give rise to a damaged 5 coating.
  • Tl high speed tool steel on mild steel at a rotational speed of 1000 rev/ in corresponds to an optimum table speed of 4 mm/s; a table speed of 2 mm/s is too slow and gives a thick but irregular deposit of mechtrode material; while a table 0 speed of more than about 5 to 6 mm/s leads to a regular, but too thin, deposit of mechtrode material.
  • the corresponding figures for 440C martensitic stainless steel on 316 stainless steel are 1000 rev/min and about 3 mm/s, while those for Stellite on 316 5 stainless steel are 820 rev/min and about 2.5 mm/s.
  • the thickness of the coating of mechtrode material produced on the substrate will be selected depending on the intended use of the plate, on the intended machining operations to which it would be subjected, 0 and on the thickness of the substrate, but the coating produced will typically have a thickness of about 0.2 to 2.0 mm, and preferably about 1.0 m . It is preferred that the coating be formed in a single pass of the mechtrode over the substrate, though multiple 5 mechtrode passes, building up more than one layer of mechtrode material on the substrate, are not excluded. The depth or thickness of the layer of mechtrode material produced can depend on the diameter of the mechtrode and the material of which it is made. Thus a
  • 30 10 mm mechtrode may typically produce a coating in the range 0.2 to 1 mm thick, whereas a 25 mm diameter mechtrode may produce a coating in the range of 0.5 to 2.0 mm thick.
  • the depth of the applied layer of mechtrode material 35 may be increased, by up to about 40% if necessary, by so mounting the substrate plates in the clamping means that there is a "quasi recess", i.e. a void with side walls defined by the clamping means, such as to enable the edges of the mechtrode layer to be supported as it is built up.
  • This quasi recess may conveniently comprise the space above the upper edge being treated, when located below the upper edge of the clamping jaws as mentioned above.
  • the final coating thickness on the stack immediately prior to splitting in step (C) is limited by the practicality of the splitting operation itself.
  • the maximum final coating thickness is related to the thickness of each substrate plate.
  • the limiting plate thickness for a given final coating thickness, is governed by the bending moment required for breaking the coating to split the plates away from each other without significant bending of the plates.
  • the applied layer is preferably ground before the stack is split (and before the abovementioned cooling step if this is undertaken) .
  • This grinding step is discussed in another connection below: at this stage it should be noted that the thinner the substrate plates, the more material may need to be removed from the hard layer by grinding.
  • the transverse width of the applied layer will be similar to the diameter of the mechtrode employed. Mechtrode ⁇ of diameter up to 50 mm can be employed in a single pass, wider coatings requiring multiple passes on spaced parallel tracks. The width of this applied layer of mechtrode material will, of course, govern the thickness of the stack and hence the number of plates that can be treated on a single occasion. 8
  • a heat treatment step is desirable after the mechtrode material has been deposited on to the stack of plates, in order to develop secondary hardening characteristics. Heating in a furnace at about 570°C for two cycles of one hour each, is usually sufficient. This heat treatment may take place either before or after step (C) .
  • the significant feature of the process is that two different kinds of hard facing alloys can be used for the mechtrode material.
  • allotropic transformation to relatively soft austenite takes place at high temperatures.
  • the austenite is quenched to hard martensite as a result of the process.
  • alloys of the Stellite type undergo no allotropic change and simply experience high temperature softening to enable coating to take place.
  • a feature of the friction surfacing (coating) process is that the coating parameters are selected so as to generate the intended heat flow characteristics.
  • the jaws of the vice or other clamping means used to hold the plates of the stack together are conductive, and provide a flow path for heat away from the stack.
  • This heat removal together with the relative movement of the mechtrode and the stack, sets up heat flow characteristics which enable the relatively hard mechtrode material to be deposited on the relatively soft metal of the substrate.
  • Parameters are optimised with a view to sufficient heat being generated to enable the friction interface to rise from a level in contact with the substrate to a level along the mechtrode and spaced a small distance from the substrate.
  • a significant metallurgical advantage is that the mechtrode alloy is hot worked during coating, so that the resulting fine structure has attendant good properties.
  • the microstructure of the applied hard layer is a very fine array of carbide particles in a matrix of (in the case of a high speed transformable tool steel) very fine martensite. On subsequent tempering, the latter is enhanced by secondary hardening.
  • the size distribution of the carbides in the matrix is such that there are relatively few carbides above 2 microns in size.
  • the carbides are very uniformly distributed through the matrix, while the fineness of the microstructure gives good edge retention properties when a cutting edge is subsequently ground on the individual plates.
  • High speed tool steels normally have a much coarser microstructure, with large carbide particles in a banded form and a coarse martensitic matrix.
  • austenite which is present at the equilibrium condition of the mechtrode during coating is hot worked at very high strain rates, it has an extremely fine microstructure, so that, on the rapid cooling which immediately follows, it is transformed to an equally fine martensitic structure.
  • cobalt-based alloys the resulting microstructure is uniform, with a highly uniform array of angular complex carbides in a solid solution matrix of cobalt/chromium.
  • the exposed surface of the applied layer of_ the latter may, as already mentioned, have to be ground to the required thickness of the applied layer. Such grinding is however desirable for another reason. Without a ground surface, the developing cracks in the mechtrode material tend to follow the surface irregularities of the deposited material, and become particularly irregular at the end of the deposit. This irregularity in cracking leads to certain difficulties, namely that (a) few of the separated plates have a perfect coating of mechtrode material, (b) portions of the mechtrode material may be chipped off easily from the substrate metal, and (c) satisfactory splitting of the stack into the individual plates is difficult even with cooling.
  • the stack of plates is, as already discussed, preferably cooled below the ductile/brittle transition temperature of the substrate and/or mechtrode materials as applicable, in order not only to embrittle the materials , but also to assist crack propagation therein.
  • each sub ⁇ division of the stack is split in the middle, i.e. in half, until individual plates are obtained.
  • the use of this symmetrical ordered sequence of dividing the stack is desirable because the coatings of the mechtrode material on the different plates support one another, and a symmetrical division sequence promotes a more even hard facing coating on each plate.
  • step (B) the mechtrode is first lowered ' on to one end of the exposed upper surface of the stac , and is then moved along it to deposit the coating before being lifted clear of the stack. There is therefore an end portion of the upper surface with which the mechtrode is. at least momentarily, in stationary contact (in the sense that the axis of rotation of the mechtrode is stationary) . This has been observed to result in undesirable deformations in the region of the upper ends of the plates in the stack, such that it is difficult or impossible to split the plates from each other in these end regions so as to produce a usable product.
  • the end portions are preferably cut away from the stack before the latter is split (and before it is cooled as described above, if that step is undertaken). If the stack is heat treated prior to being split, the end portions are preferably, though not necessarily, removed before heat treatment takes place.
  • the number of plates in the stack at the commencement of step (C) i.e. after removal of the end portions, is an even number.
  • Figure 1 is an end view of a knife blade which is the product of a process according to the invention
  • Figure 2 is an end-wise cross-section through a stack of plates clamped ready for the application of a hard facing layer, taken on the line II-II in Figure 3;
  • Figure 3 is a plan view on Figure 2;
  • Figure 4 is an enlarged scrap view corresponding to part of Figure 2 and showing the stack at the end of the friction surfacing operation,- Figure 5 shows a stack early in the splitting operation;
  • Figure 6 shows the top end of two adjacent plates during splitting
  • Figure 7 is an end view of an individual plate split from the stack.
  • Figure 8 is a view similar to Figure 3 but showing an alternative way of stacking the plates in a clamping device.
  • Figure 9 is a scrap view as seen from one side of Figure 2, but showing a modification.
  • FIG 1 shows a disposable knife blade 10 comprising a mild steel laminar 12, 1.0 mm thick, with its sharpened cutting edge 14 tipped with a layer 16 of Tl high speed steel.
  • This blade is made as follows.
  • Eight mild steel plates 12, 1.0 mm thick, are oxidised to form a weld inhibiting coating, and are then stacked as shown in Figures 2 and 3 with their top and bottom edges substantially level, and clamped in a vice 20 having thermally conducting jaws 22 between which the stack, 24, is securely clamped with the jaws in contact with the entire area of the exposed end surfaces of the stack. All of the plates rest on a support block 26, having its top and bottom edges ground parallel . The block 26 is supported on the bed 28 of the vice.
  • top edge 30 and the bottom edge 32 of the stack are milled flat, so as to be parallel with each other and truly perpendicular with the faces of the stack in contact with the jaws 22.
  • a cylindrical mechtrode 38 is lowered vertically on to the end portion 40 of the stack and into contact with the top surface 30, and is then moved once along the latter as indicated by the arrow in Figure 3, at a speed of 4 mm/s.
  • the mechtrode is raised clear of the stack.
  • the mechtrode deposits, by friction surfacing, a layer 44 of the high speed tool steel over the surface 30.
  • the plates 12 are now joined together by the applied layer 44 of the hard facing high speed tool steel material.
  • the upper surface of the applied layer 44 is now ground to the required thickness, and for control of cracking as discussed above.
  • the stack may be removed from the vice before or after this grinding operation.
  • the end portions 40 and 42 are cut off, and the stack is heat treated at 570°C in two cycles of one hour each; the heating is followed by immersion in liquid nitrogen for 20 minutes.
  • Figures 2 to 4 the plates 12 are stacked with their ends abutting against the jaws 22.
  • Figure 8 shows an alternative arrangement in which a stack of plates is clamped in the vice with the interfaces between the plates parallel to the clamping faces of the jaws instead of perpendicular thereto.
  • This arrangement may well be preferable in the manufacture of small tools , where it is acceptable for the hard faced edge of each tool to be of a length no greater than the diameter of the mechtrode, the profile of which is indicated in phantom in Figure 8. As before, it moves along the top edge of the stack from adjacent one jaw to adjacent the other.
  • top edge 30 of the stack 24 is shown mounted a few millimetres below the level of the top edge 34 of the jaws 22, to define a "quasi recess" 36, which may be desirable under certain circumstances as discussed more fully earlier herein.

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  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
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Abstract

A sheet, blade or lamina of metal (12) of thickness 0.1 - 1 mm e.g., for forming a disposable knife blade has adhered along one edge a friction surfacing material (16) of extent 0.1 - 4 mm, said friction surfacing material extending from and lying in the major plane of the sheet, blade or lamina. The blade may be inexpensively produced by a method which comprises mechanically depositing by means of rotatory friction surfacing a layer (44) of relatively hard material along the substrate edge, in which (a) a stack of sheets or blades (12) is clamped together to form the substrate, (b) the friction surfacing material (44) is deposited along an edge of the stack, and (c) the resulting surfaced stack is split into individual sheets (12) each having one edge a generally coplanar layer (16) of adhered friction coating material.

Description

FORMING HARD FACINGS ON MATERIALS
This invention relates to the formation of hard facings along edges of materials by friction surfacing.
British Patent Specification No. 572 789 (Hans Klopstock) describes a method for joining metals, in which a rotating rod or bar of weld metal is fed into contact with the metal part or parts to be treated, with such continuity of pressure and at such speed of relative movement with respect thereto, that the frictional heat generated causes the end of the rod or bar and the metal to attain welding temperature. The result is that the metal of the rod or bar becomes deposited on the metal under treatment, so as to form a local enlargement or to join two juxtaposed metal parts together, or to fill in blowholes or the like.
Methods of friction surfacing materials are described in Patent Specif cations GB-A-1 018 412 and US-A-3 537 172 (both to Voznesensky et al), and O-A-87/04957. The last-mentioned specification describes the formation of a hard facing, preferably of a high speed tool steel or a Stellite, along the edge of a substrate through mechanical deposition by rotatory friction surfacing. The combination of high temperatures, below the melting points of coating material and substrate, with high rates of strain gives rise to a very fine coating microstructure, resulting in an edge or valve facing or seat which exhibits unexpectedly good mechanical properties and service life. The coating is formed in a recessed edge of the substrate, on a major face thereof, and gives rise to coatings the thickness of which is more than 0.2 mm and typically 0.2 to 2.0 mm, which is thick enough for the coating to be subsequently machined flat prior to being given a sharp edge.
This invention is concerned with the production of hardened edges on plates, which term is to be understood in this description and the accompanying claims to include sheets, strips, laminae or generally any plate-like piece, not necessarily flat but being capable of being nested with other similar pieces to form a stack. The plates may be of carbon or stainless steel or other metal. They may typically be laminae intended for scalpel or knife blades or the like. The plates may be upwards of 0.5 mm thick.
For use as disposable knife blades in particular, an inexpensive method of forming the strengthened edge is needed.
This invention provides a method for applying a hard facing along an edge of a substrate which comprises mechanically depositing, by means of rotatory friction surfacing treatment, an applied layer of a relatively hard coating material along -the substrate edge, wherein the method includes the steps of (A) clamping together a stack of plates to form the substrate, (B) depositing the said hard material by rotatory friction surfacing along an edge of the stack, and (C) splitting the resulting treated stack into individual plates, each having bonded along one of its edges a generally coplanar applied layer of the said hard material.
The invention also provides a metal plate (as defined above) at least 0.5 mm thick, having bonded along one edge, by the method of the invention, an applied layer of a relatively hard material about 0.2 to 2.0 mm thick and extending from and lying in the major plane of the plate. After a stack of plates has been assembled, it is desirable to ensure that its upper and lower end surfaces are flat, smooth and directed at right angles to the major surfaces. For friction surfacing, the stack is preferably held between thermally conductive jaws of a clamping device such as a vice, and is supported on a block which also fits between the jaws of the clamping device, and which rests on a slide or bed of the latter. If the upper ends of the plates are not clean, the mechtrode material, transferred from the end of the rotating sacrificial mechtrode used in the friction surfacing process , may become poorly bonded to the substrate metal. If they are not level, then: (a) the coating of mechtrode material will be uneven as between different plates , or between different regions of the individual plates; (b) substrate material of plates that are higher than the adjacent plates may become rolled over on to the adjacent plates, and (c) inadequately supported plates may be unable to withstand the pressures needed for mechtrode deposition, and may become bent. To avoid these difficulties, it is desirable to machine the upper and lower surfaces of the assembled stack, e.g. by milling or grinding, so that they are clean, true and level before the friction surfacing operation is undertaken. The surfaces of the supporting block must also be true and level so that there is no gap between any of the individual plates and the adjacent surface of the supporting block.
During friction surfacing (step (B)), the stack of plates is held wholly within the bite of the jaws of the vice or other clamping means in which it is retained. In the absence of adequate clamping forces on the stack, the mechtrode can push the individual plates apart. The individual plates, especially if they are thin blades, cannot otherwise withstand the forming pressure of the mechtrode, which would then penetrate the stack. By positioning the stack wholly within the bite of the jaws, the clamping force is effective at the upper and lower edges of the stack, and separation of the plate during the friction surfacing process can be avoided. It has been found that the upper edge of the stack can be located about 5 to 10 mm below the upper edge of the clamping jaws.
Where the substrate plates are of steel, there is a risk that the edges of the individual plates immediately underlying the deposited mechtrode material may become diffusion-bonded together during step (B) as a side effect of the heat generated by friction surfacing and the clamping forces on the substrate pack. This diffusion bonding creates a weld between the plates which makes subsequent separation into individual plates in step (C) more difficult or time consuming. A preferred remedy is to form a weld- inhibiting coating on the major faces of each plate, at least adjacent to the edges to be friction surfaced, when preparing the plates before stacking them together for clamping. Such a weld-inhibiting coating may conveniently be of iron oxide formed by oxidation. The metal of each plate in the stack is thus separated from that of its neighbours by layers of iron oxide which inhibit diffusion bonding.
In step (C) , splitting of the stack into individual plates involves breaking the applied layer along the interface between each plate and the next, so that on each plate, the sides of the hardfacing layer are substantially coplanar with the major surfaces of the plate. Particularly if either the substrate or the hard layer material is one which is capable of brittle fracture, the stack is preferably cooled, immediately prior to the splitting operation, down to a temperature such as to assist easy and clean splitting, the splitting itself then being carried out while the stack is still at this reduced temperature. This temperature iε preferably below the ductile/brittle transition temperature, if any, of the substrate and/or applied layer material. This is because, if there are some traces of diffusion bonding (despite the presence of an oxide layer as described above) , the combined effect of the low temperature and the natural notch between the plates induces brittle fracture of the diffusion bond between the plates , while in any case it induces brittle fracture of the applied layer in the planes of the interfaces between plates . This ensures a clean break in either case, with no trace of ductile tearing.
Such cooling is for example carried out by immersing the stack in liquid nitrogen for an appropriate period such as 20 minutes. It is of advantage where the substrates are of, for example, steel other than stainless steel, and/or the applied layer is of Tl high speed steel .
In order to produce a mechtrode coating of the desired thickness, it is necessary to select an appropriate combination of mechtrode load, mechtrode rotational speed, and table speed (i.e. relative linear velocity between the mechtrode and the pack) . This will depend on the diameter of the mechtrode and the materials of the mechtrode and substrate plates . The particular conditions needed will thus vary depending on the materials being used. For a given pressure applied by the mechtrode, too fast a table speed will not give the intended coating thickness, whereas too slow a coating speed will give a coating which is too thick and of irregular profile. Too fast a rotational speed can lead to a coating thinner than intended, whereas too slow a rotational speed can give rise to a damaged 5 coating. Deposition of Tl high speed tool steel on mild steel at a rotational speed of 1000 rev/ in corresponds to an optimum table speed of 4 mm/s; a table speed of 2 mm/s is too slow and gives a thick but irregular deposit of mechtrode material; while a table 0 speed of more than about 5 to 6 mm/s leads to a regular, but too thin, deposit of mechtrode material. The corresponding figures for 440C martensitic stainless steel on 316 stainless steel are 1000 rev/min and about 3 mm/s, while those for Stellite on 316 5 stainless steel are 820 rev/min and about 2.5 mm/s.
The thickness of the coating of mechtrode material produced on the substrate will be selected depending on the intended use of the plate, on the intended machining operations to which it would be subjected, 0 and on the thickness of the substrate, but the coating produced will typically have a thickness of about 0.2 to 2.0 mm, and preferably about 1.0 m . It is preferred that the coating be formed in a single pass of the mechtrode over the substrate, though multiple 5 mechtrode passes, building up more than one layer of mechtrode material on the substrate, are not excluded. The depth or thickness of the layer of mechtrode material produced can depend on the diameter of the mechtrode and the material of which it is made. Thus a
30 10 mm mechtrode may typically produce a coating in the range 0.2 to 1 mm thick, whereas a 25 mm diameter mechtrode may produce a coating in the range of 0.5 to 2.0 mm thick.
The depth of the applied layer of mechtrode material 35 may be increased, by up to about 40% if necessary, by so mounting the substrate plates in the clamping means that there is a "quasi recess", i.e. a void with side walls defined by the clamping means, such as to enable the edges of the mechtrode layer to be supported as it is built up. This quasi recess may conveniently comprise the space above the upper edge being treated, when located below the upper edge of the clamping jaws as mentioned above. However, the final coating thickness on the stack immediately prior to splitting in step (C) is limited by the practicality of the splitting operation itself. Thus, for a given combination of materials, the maximum final coating thickness is related to the thickness of each substrate plate. In general, the limiting plate thickness, for a given final coating thickness, is governed by the bending moment required for breaking the coating to split the plates away from each other without significant bending of the plates.
Accordingly, to facilitate splitting and to produce the required final coating thickness, the applied layer is preferably ground before the stack is split (and before the abovementioned cooling step if this is undertaken) . This grinding step is discussed in another connection below: at this stage it should be noted that the thinner the substrate plates, the more material may need to be removed from the hard layer by grinding.
The transverse width of the applied layer will be similar to the diameter of the mechtrode employed. Mechtrodeε of diameter up to 50 mm can be employed in a single pass, wider coatings requiring multiple passes on spaced parallel tracks. The width of this applied layer of mechtrode material will, of course, govern the thickness of the stack and hence the number of plates that can be treated on a single occasion. 8
In at least the case of high speed tool steel mechtrodes, a heat treatment step is desirable after the mechtrode material has been deposited on to the stack of plates, in order to develop secondary hardening characteristics. Heating in a furnace at about 570°C for two cycles of one hour each, is usually sufficient. This heat treatment may take place either before or after step (C) .
The significant feature of the process is that two different kinds of hard facing alloys can be used for the mechtrode material. Thus when high speed tool steels and martensitic stainless steels are used, allotropic transformation to relatively soft austenite takes place at high temperatures. The austenite is quenched to hard martensite as a result of the process. In contrast, alloys of the Stellite type undergo no allotropic change and simply experience high temperature softening to enable coating to take place. A feature of the friction surfacing (coating) process is that the coating parameters are selected so as to generate the intended heat flow characteristics. In particular, the jaws of the vice or other clamping means used to hold the plates of the stack together are conductive, and provide a flow path for heat away from the stack. This heat removal, together with the relative movement of the mechtrode and the stack, sets up heat flow characteristics which enable the relatively hard mechtrode material to be deposited on the relatively soft metal of the substrate. Parameters are optimised with a view to sufficient heat being generated to enable the friction interface to rise from a level in contact with the substrate to a level along the mechtrode and spaced a small distance from the substrate. A significant metallurgical advantage is that the mechtrode alloy is hot worked during coating, so that the resulting fine structure has attendant good properties. The microstructure of the applied hard layer is a very fine array of carbide particles in a matrix of (in the case of a high speed transformable tool steel) very fine martensite. On subsequent tempering, the latter is enhanced by secondary hardening. The size distribution of the carbides in the matrix is such that there are relatively few carbides above 2 microns in size. The carbides are very uniformly distributed through the matrix, while the fineness of the microstructure gives good edge retention properties when a cutting edge is subsequently ground on the individual plates. High speed tool steels normally have a much coarser microstructure, with large carbide particles in a banded form and a coarse martensitic matrix. By contrast, when the method described herein is used, because the austenite which is present at the equilibrium condition of the mechtrode during coating is hot worked at very high strain rates, it has an extremely fine microstructure, so that, on the rapid cooling which immediately follows, it is transformed to an equally fine martensitic structure. In cobalt-based alloys the resulting microstructure is uniform, with a highly uniform array of angular complex carbides in a solid solution matrix of cobalt/chromium.
After the plates have been coated with mechtrode material in step (B) , the exposed surface of the applied layer of_ the latter may, as already mentioned, have to be ground to the required thickness of the applied layer. Such grinding is however desirable for another reason. Without a ground surface, the developing cracks in the mechtrode material tend to follow the surface irregularities of the deposited material, and become particularly irregular at the end of the deposit. This irregularity in cracking leads to certain difficulties, namely that (a) few of the separated plates have a perfect coating of mechtrode material, (b) portions of the mechtrode material may be chipped off easily from the substrate metal, and (c) satisfactory splitting of the stack into the individual plates is difficult even with cooling. However, if the mechtrode material is ground smooth and flat, it has been found that splitting becomes much easier, because cracks propagate linearly along the divisions between adjacent plates. After the deposited mechtrode material has been ground until its surface is smooth, true and flat, the stack of plates is, as already discussed, preferably cooled below the ductile/brittle transition temperature of the substrate and/or mechtrode materials as applicable, in order not only to embrittle the materials , but also to assist crack propagation therein.
The plates are then split apart endwise, starting from the centre of the stack. As far as possible, each sub¬ division of the stack is split in the middle, i.e. in half, until individual plates are obtained. The use of this symmetrical ordered sequence of dividing the stack is desirable because the coatings of the mechtrode material on the different plates support one another, and a symmetrical division sequence promotes a more even hard facing coating on each plate.
During the surfacing process (step (B) ) , the mechtrode is first lowered' on to one end of the exposed upper surface of the stac , and is then moved along it to deposit the coating before being lifted clear of the stack. There is therefore an end portion of the upper surface with which the mechtrode is. at least momentarily, in stationary contact (in the sense that the axis of rotation of the mechtrode is stationary) . This has been observed to result in undesirable deformations in the region of the upper ends of the plates in the stack, such that it is difficult or impossible to split the plates from each other in these end regions so as to produce a usable product.
Accordingly, to avoid the consequences of these end effects the end portions are preferably cut away from the stack before the latter is split (and before it is cooled as described above, if that step is undertaken). If the stack is heat treated prior to being split, the end portions are preferably, though not necessarily, removed before heat treatment takes place.
In order to obtain fully symmetrical splitting as described above, the number of plates in the stack at the commencement of step (C) , i.e. after removal of the end portions, is an even number.
An embodiment of the invention will now be briefly described, by way of example only, with reference to the annexed diagrammatic drawings, in which:-
Figure 1 is an end view of a knife blade which is the product of a process according to the invention;
Figure 2 is an end-wise cross-section through a stack of plates clamped ready for the application of a hard facing layer, taken on the line II-II in Figure 3;
Figure 3 is a plan view on Figure 2;
Figure 4 is an enlarged scrap view corresponding to part of Figure 2 and showing the stack at the end of the friction surfacing operation,- Figure 5 shows a stack early in the splitting operation;
Figure 6 shows the top end of two adjacent plates during splitting;
Figure 7 is an end view of an individual plate split from the stack; and
Figure 8 is a view similar to Figure 3 but showing an alternative way of stacking the plates in a clamping device; and
Figure 9 is a scrap view as seen from one side of Figure 2, but showing a modification.
Figure 1, not to scale, shows a disposable knife blade 10 comprising a mild steel laminar 12, 1.0 mm thick, with its sharpened cutting edge 14 tipped with a layer 16 of Tl high speed steel. This blade is made as follows.
Eight mild steel plates 12, 1.0 mm thick, are oxidised to form a weld inhibiting coating, and are then stacked as shown in Figures 2 and 3 with their top and bottom edges substantially level, and clamped in a vice 20 having thermally conducting jaws 22 between which the stack, 24, is securely clamped with the jaws in contact with the entire area of the exposed end surfaces of the stack. All of the plates rest on a support block 26, having its top and bottom edges ground parallel . The block 26 is supported on the bed 28 of the vice.
The top edge 30 and the bottom edge 32 of the stack are milled flat, so as to be parallel with each other and truly perpendicular with the faces of the stack in contact with the jaws 22. Once the stack, with its top and bottom edges milled, is clamped between the jaws and firmly seated on the block 26, it is ready for the friction surfacing operation. In this condition, the top edge 34 of the jaws lies a suitable small distance above the top edge 30 of the stack.
A cylindrical mechtrode 38, only the leading end of which is shown, rotating about its own vertical axis at 1000 rev/min, is lowered vertically on to the end portion 40 of the stack and into contact with the top surface 30, and is then moved once along the latter as indicated by the arrow in Figure 3, at a speed of 4 mm/s. When it reaches the other end portion 42 of the stack, the mechtrode is raised clear of the stack. During its pass over the surface 30 , the mechtrode deposits, by friction surfacing, a layer 44 of the high speed tool steel over the surface 30. The plates 12 are now joined together by the applied layer 44 of the hard facing high speed tool steel material.
The upper surface of the applied layer 44 is now ground to the required thickness, and for control of cracking as discussed above. The stack may be removed from the vice before or after this grinding operation. The end portions 40 and 42 are cut off, and the stack is heat treated at 570°C in two cycles of one hour each; the heating is followed by immersion in liquid nitrogen for 20 minutes.
While the stack is still at substantially the low temperature of the liquid nitrogen, it is split, starting from the bottom, using a tool not shown, so as " to split the stack in half as indicated by the arrow in Figure 5. Each -block of four plates 12 is then split in half, and finally the resulting four blocks of two plates are split in half to give individual plates 12, each with a flat topped tip 16 (Figure 7) . Figure 6 shows a splitting operation between two of the plates at the instant where brittle fracture of the layer 44 is taking place in a plane substantially coincident with the interface 46 between the two plates 12.
Finally, the cutting edge shown in Figure 1 is formed on the plate shown in Figure 7, to give the finished blade.
In Figures 2 to 4, the plates 12 are stacked with their ends abutting against the jaws 22. Figure 8 shows an alternative arrangement in which a stack of plates is clamped in the vice with the interfaces between the plates parallel to the clamping faces of the jaws instead of perpendicular thereto. This arrangement may well be preferable in the manufacture of small tools , where it is acceptable for the hard faced edge of each tool to be of a length no greater than the diameter of the mechtrode, the profile of which is indicated in phantom in Figure 8. As before, it moves along the top edge of the stack from adjacent one jaw to adjacent the other.
In Figure 9, the top edge 30 of the stack 24 is shown mounted a few millimetres below the level of the top edge 34 of the jaws 22, to define a "quasi recess" 36, which may be desirable under certain circumstances as discussed more fully earlier herein.

Claims

1. A method of applying a hard facing along an edge of a substrate which comprises mechanically depositing, by means of rotatory friction surfacing treatment, an applied layer of relatively hard coating material along the substrate edge, wherein the method includes the steps of (A) clamping together a stack of plates to form the substrate, (B) depositing the said hard materials by rotatory friction surfacing along an edge of the stack, and (C) splitting the resulting treated stack in individual plates, each having bonded along one of its edges a generally coplanar applied layer of the said hard material.
2. A method according to Claim 1, including the further step of levelling the said edge of the stack by machining material therefrom before depositing the layer of hard material .
3. A method according to Claim 1 or Claim 2, including the further step of grinding the applied layer of hard material to a smooth finish before the stack is split into individual plates.
4. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the plates are of ferrous material and are oxidised before assembly into the stack, so as to inhibit subsequent diffusion-bonding of the plates to each other adjacent to the applied layer.
5. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the stack is heat treated after step (B) but before step (C) .
6. A method according to any one of Claims 1 to 4 , wherein the individual plates are heat treated after step (C; has taken place. . A method according to any one of the preceding
Claims, including the further step, where either the substrate or applied layer is of a material exhibiting a ductile/brittle transition, of cooling the treated stack immediately before splitting it in step (C) to a temperature below the ductile/brittle transition temperature of the substrate material, or below that of the said hard coating material, or below both transition temperatures, splitting then being carried out while the stack is still at this low temperature.
8. A method according to Claim 7, wherein the stack iε cooled by immersing it in liquid nitrogen.
9. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the stack is split, in step (C) , into individual plates by separation from the edge opposite to the applied layer, towards the latter.
10. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the stack is formed from at least three plates .
11. A method according to Claim 10 when dependent on Claim 9, wherein the stack is split by successive operations each producing portions of the stack containing as nearly as possible equal numbers of plates still joined at the applied layer, until individual plates are obtained.
12. A method according to any one of the preceding
Claims, including the further step of removing, prior to step (C) , end portions of the stack on which, during step (B) , a rotatory mechtrode has been stationary.
13. A method according to Claim 12 when dependent on Claim 11. wherein the number of plates in the stack at the commencement of step (C) is an even number.
14. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the plates are stacked in step (A) with the substrate edge to be treated lying below a plane containing the upper edge of a pair of clamping jaws whereby the stack is clamped, so as to define a quasi recess over the said edge.
15. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the hard coating material provides metal carbides in a matrix based on metal selected from the group consisting of iron, cobalt and nickel.
16. A method according to Claim 15, in which the hard coating material is high speed transformable tool steel and wherein, in step (B) , this material is applied to the stack without melting at an austenitising temperature at high rates of strain, in such a way as to form a fine microstructure, with carbides of about 2 microns particle size or below and substantially uniformly distributed in a very fine martensitic matrix, the resulting applied layer being subsequently tempered to achieve secondary hardening.
17. A method according to Claim 16, wherein after the hard layer has been applied, the substrate iε maintained at a cryogenic temperature for a predetermined period and subsequently tempered.
18. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims, wherein the substrate plates are of mild or carbon steel.
19. A method according to any one of Claims 1 to 15, wherein the substrate plates are of a stainless steel and the hard coating material is a cobalt/chromium/ tungsten/carbon alloy.
20. A method according to any one of the preceding Claims , comprising the further step of forming into a cutting edge that edge of a plate separated from the stack which has the applied layer of hard material thereon.
21. A metal plate at least 0.5 mm thick, having bonded along one edge, by a method according to any one of the preceding Claims, an applied layer of a relatively hard material about 0.2 to 2.0 mm thick and extending from and lying in the major plane of the plate.
22. A method of applying a hard facing along an edge of a substrate, performed substantially as described with reference to Figures 2 to 7 of the drawings of this application.
23. A method of making a cutting blade, performed substantially as described with reference to the drawings of this application.
PCT/GB1989/000983 1988-08-30 1989-08-23 Forming hard facings on materials WO1990002015A1 (en)

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Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0460901A2 (en) * 1990-06-06 1991-12-11 The Welding Institute Surfacing a convex substrate
WO1992009398A1 (en) * 1990-11-27 1992-06-11 The Welding Institute Depositing material onto a substrate
WO1994025641A1 (en) * 1993-04-26 1994-11-10 Roger John Wedlake Forming a hard layer on a substrate
US5525706A (en) * 1992-10-02 1996-06-11 Cargill, Incorporated Melt-stable lactide polymer nonwoven fabric and process for manufacture thereof
WO2016089716A1 (en) * 2014-12-02 2016-06-09 Corning Incorporated Method of edge coating multiple articles
CN114411087A (en) * 2021-12-29 2022-04-29 西安鑫垚陶瓷复合材料有限公司 Turbine guide blade coating preparation tool and coating preparation method

Families Citing this family (3)

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
GB2242848A (en) * 1990-04-12 1991-10-16 Frictec Ltd Depositing coating on materials
GB2268430B (en) * 1992-07-07 1996-02-07 Frictec Ltd Method of coating materials
GB2270527A (en) * 1992-09-11 1994-03-16 Rolls Royce Plc Coating a face of a component using apertured mask of same size as the face; turbine tip blades

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2469241A1 (en) * 1979-11-16 1981-05-22 Goetze Ag Wear and/or corrosion resistant coatings for machine parts - applied by friction welding, and suitable for coating piston rings with molybdenum
WO1987004957A1 (en) * 1986-02-17 1987-08-27 Friction Technology Limited Method of forming hard facings on materials

Patent Citations (2)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
FR2469241A1 (en) * 1979-11-16 1981-05-22 Goetze Ag Wear and/or corrosion resistant coatings for machine parts - applied by friction welding, and suitable for coating piston rings with molybdenum
WO1987004957A1 (en) * 1986-02-17 1987-08-27 Friction Technology Limited Method of forming hard facings on materials

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
EP0460901A2 (en) * 1990-06-06 1991-12-11 The Welding Institute Surfacing a convex substrate
EP0460901A3 (en) * 1990-06-06 1993-09-29 The Welding Institute Surfacing a convex substrate
WO1992009398A1 (en) * 1990-11-27 1992-06-11 The Welding Institute Depositing material onto a substrate
US5525706A (en) * 1992-10-02 1996-06-11 Cargill, Incorporated Melt-stable lactide polymer nonwoven fabric and process for manufacture thereof
WO1994025641A1 (en) * 1993-04-26 1994-11-10 Roger John Wedlake Forming a hard layer on a substrate
WO2016089716A1 (en) * 2014-12-02 2016-06-09 Corning Incorporated Method of edge coating multiple articles
TWI693108B (en) * 2014-12-02 2020-05-11 美商康寧公司 Method of edge coating multiple articles
CN114411087A (en) * 2021-12-29 2022-04-29 西安鑫垚陶瓷复合材料有限公司 Turbine guide blade coating preparation tool and coating preparation method
CN114411087B (en) * 2021-12-29 2023-09-29 西安鑫垚陶瓷复合材料有限公司 Turbine guide vane coating preparation tool and coating preparation method

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GB8820448D0 (en) 1988-09-28
GB2222378A (en) 1990-03-07
EP0431018A1 (en) 1991-06-12

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