Characteristics of Impulse Carburization LPC Process.
Ryszard FilipKamil OchałKamil GancarczykWojciech Jerzy NowakBarbara KościelniakBartek WierzbaPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2021)
In the present work, Pyrowear53 steel was subjected to the impulse carburizing LPC process. After carburation, the material was quenched and tempered. Postprocessing analyses included the measurement of hardness, carbon content, residual austenite, and residual stresses. The results revealed that the thermochemical treatment resulted in the formation of an approximately 1200 µm wide carburized layer. The results of hardness, carbon content, and residual austenite measurement showed a continuous gradient (drop) in the measured values within the carburized layer. However, the results of residual stresses revealed the existence of a local extremum, namely, a zone with higher compressive stresses at the depth between 600 and 1000 µm. This was explained by a different temperature for initiation of martensite transformation as a function of carbon content. This difference resulted in the occurrence of two martensite expansion fronts at two different depths, resulting in an increase in compressive stresses at the noted depth range. Moreover, it was concluded that this region was present for material containing between 0.8 and 0.4 wt% carbon for Pyrowear53.