Journal Article10.1016/S0257-8972(00)00792-1
Low-temperature plasma-assisted nitriding
214
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a review of low-temperature plasma-assisted nitriding methods for metallurgical surface modification to improve wear, hardness and fatigue resistance of ferrous and non-ferrous materials.
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Abstract: Plasma-assisted nitriding is an attractive surface treatment for metallurgical surface modification to improve wear, hardness and fatigue resistance of ferrous and non-ferrous materials. For this purpose, ion nitriding by a d.c. glow discharge is generally efficient for numerous materials. However, for some metals and alloys, the processing temperature, dominated by the discharge parameters, is too high and cannot be controlled independently from the plasma reactivity. This paper reviews the following solutions for low-temperature plasma-assisted nitriding: pulsed d.c. discharge, thermionically assisted d.c. triode arrangements, plasma implantation, electron cyclotron resonance systems and thermionic arc discharges. We focus on metallurgical results obtained by these techniques on austenitic stainless steel and aluminium.
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Citations
Coating of stainless steel and titanium bipolar plates for anticorrosion in PEMFC: A review
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Two-Dimensional Contact and Noncontact Micromanipulation in Liquid Using an Untethered Mobile Magnetic Microrobot
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177
Glow discharge nitriding of AISI 316L austenitic stainless steel: Influence of treatment pressure
TL;DR: In this article, the influence of treatment pressure on the characteristics of modified surface layers produced by low-temperature d.c. glow discharge nitriding on AISI 316L austenitic stainless steel samples is investigated.
152
On the formation of expanded austenite during plasma nitriding of an AISI 316L austenitic stainless steel
TL;DR: In this article, a case was constructed by a high volume fraction of Fe4N, Cr2N and CrN nitrides, leading to a low distortion of the parent austenitic phase, maintaining the original cubic lattice.
References
•Book
High nitrogen steels
Valentin G. Gavriljuk,Hans Berns +1 more
- 01 Jan 1999
Abstract: High-nitrogen steels (HNS) have attracted raised attention due to their exceptional mechanical properties, corrosion resistance and wear resistance. These properties have led to increased applications in energy production, transportation, pulp and paper, oil and gas, chemical industries and so forth. To foster scientific and technical exchanges between experts from the steel industry, research organizations and end-users concerning this specific steel category, the International Conference on High Nitrogen Steels was initiated in Lille (France) in 1988, continued in Aachen (Germany) in 1990, Kiev (Ukraine) in 1993, Kyoto (Japan) in 1995, Helsinki/Stockholm (Finland/Sweden) in 1998, Chennai (India) in 2002, Schaffhausen (Switzerland) in 2003, Ostend (Belgium) in 2004, Jiuzhaigou Valley (China) in 2006, Moscow (Russia) in 2009, Chennai (India) in 2012, and Hamburg (Germany) in 2014. The 13th International Conference on High Nitrogen Steels (HNS2021) was held in a hybrid format on 14th Sep. 2021 in Shanghai due to COVID-19-related travel restrictions. The conference was chaired by Prof. Han Dong (Shanghai University, China) and Prof. Guocai Chai (Sandvik Materials Technology AB/Linköping University, Sweden). The conference program comprised 8 plenary speeches and 23 oral presentations delivered by experts from research institutes, universities, and companies from over 11 countries. Prof. Han Dong opened the conference with a speech on “Look at high nitrogen austenitic stainless steels at present”. The conference featured four parallel sections covering topics: nitrogen alloying mechanisms, mechanical properties, processing and production of HNS, and their applications and in-service properties. The conference attracted over 400 online participants. This special section of Steel Research International publishes 7 highlighted works presented at HNS2021, following the journal’s regular review process. Prof. Guocai Chai presents “Roles of Nitrogen on TWIP in Advanced Austenitic Stainless Steels”. The article discusses the effect of nitrogen on deformation mechanisms at cryogenic temperature and the resulting mechanical and magnetic properties. (see front cover and article 2200359). Prof. Toshihiro Tsuchiyama reports on “Nitrogen-Enhanced Temperature Dependence of Grain Refinement Strengthening in Austenitic Stainless Steel”. The work reveals that nitrogen significantly enhances the increment of the Hall-Petch coefficient at low temperatures in high-N-containing 316L steel. As explained by the pileup model, nitrogen contributes substantially to raising the critical grain boundary shear stress and enhancing the grain boundary bonding force at low temperatures. (See back cover and article 2200428). Prof. Zhouhua Jiang and Prof. In-Ho Jung report on “Thermodynamics of Nitrogen in Molten Fe–Cr–Mn–C–N Alloys” by using the Modified Quasichemical Model with the consideration of short-range ordering. They determined a set of new self-consistent binary and ternary model parameters for the Fe-Cr-Mn-C-N solution and applied them to predict the N solubility in this multi-component molten alloys, which is vital for the process optimization of high N stainless steels, ferritic stainless steels, TWIP steels, etc. (see article 2200510). Prof. Hua-Bing Li presents “A Promising Pressurized Duplex Manufacturing Route of High Nitrogen Stainless Steel“ by incorporating the pressurized induction melting (PIM) process to fulfil nitrogen alloying, deoxidation and desulfurization and pressurized electro slag remelting (PESR) process to further desulfurize, remove large-size inclusions and elevate solidification quality. High nitrogen stainless bearing steel 30Cr15Mo1N (DIN 1.4108) has been successfully manufactured and demonstrated improved mechanical and corrosion properties compared to the single-stage PIM process (see article 2200321). Prof. Mei Zhang reports “Hot Deformation Behavior and 3D Processing Maps of Mn18Cr18N Steel”, which established a 3D processing map of Mn18Cr18N steel based on controlled hot deformation parameters using a Gleeble-3500 thermomechanical simulator and dynamic materials model. The optimum hot working temperature and strain rate domains 1000-1150°C/0.002-0.1 s 1 with effective dynamic recrystallization have been proposed (see article 2200358). Prof. Wei Peng presents “Insights into the Impact Behavior and Deformation Substructure Evolution of the N-Bearing QN1803 and 304 Stainless Steels”. The 0.26%N bearing QN1803 austenitic steel demonstrated a pronounced ductilebrittle transition temperature, which has higher impact energy than 304 at a high-temperature domain of 0-100°C. Its postponed fracture occurrence was attributed to the promoted fault growth in N-enriched zones. At low temperatures, the QN1803 has low stacking fault energy and reveals high local shear at the stacking faults, leading to local fracture initiation (see article 2200508). Prof. Ke Yang reviews high-nitrogen nickel-free stainless steel as an attractive biomedical metallic material with high strength, high fatigue resistance, high pitting corrosion resistance and H. Dong, X. Guo School of Materials Science and Engineering Shanghai University 200444 Shanghai, China E-mail: donghan@163.com; xiaofei_guo@shu.edu.cn G. Chai Research, Alleima AB (Sandvik group earlier) 81181 Sandviken, Sweden E-mail: guocai.chai@alleima.com G. Chai Engineering Material Linköping University 58183 Linköping, Sweden E-mail: guocai.chai@liu.se
548
Plasma surface engineering of low alloy steel
TL;DR: In this paper, a duplex plasma surface-engineering technique has been developed to improve the tribological properties and load-bearing capacity of low alloy steel, which is achieved by plasma nitriding the steel first so as to produce a thick, strong subsurface and then depositing a thin, hard and wear-resistant TiN coating on the nitrided substrate by ion plating.
346
Metastable phase formation and enhanced diffusion in f.c.c. alloys under high dose, high flux nitrogen implantation at high and low ion energies
TL;DR: The use of elevated target temperatures near 400 °C during high flux ion implantation of N2+ at energies ranging from 60 keV to 0.4 keV leads to a metastable, f.c. high nitrogen solid solution phase induced in austenitic (f.c.) Cr-containing stainless steels.
308
Microstructure, corrosion and tribological behaviour of plasma immersion ion-implanted austenitic stainless steel
TL;DR: The surface modification of AISI 316 stainless steel by plasma immersion ion implantation (PI3) has been investigated over a range of treatment temperatures as discussed by the authors, and the results are similar to those obtained by conventional ion beam implantation of nitrogen, but the depth of nitrogen penetration increases dramatically with temperature.
244
Progress in the analysis of the mechanisms of ion nitriding
TL;DR: In this article, the mechanisms of ion nitriding are discussed, with particular attention being paid to d.c. diode nitriders, emphasizing the importance of the cathode fall region.
159