4.5 Article

Impact of Cooling Rate during High-Pressure Gas Quenching on Fatigue Performance of Low Pressure Carburized Gears

Journal

METALS
Volume 12, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/met12111917

Keywords

case-hardened gears; fatigue; Martensite transformation; low pressure carburizing; high-pressure gas quenching

Funding

  1. Vinnova project Controlled quenching at case hardening for optimal performance-QuenchCool within the programme Strategic Vehicle Research and Innovation (FFI)

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The impact of cooling rate during high-pressure gas quenching on the fatigue performance of low-pressure carburized spur gears was studied. The results show that a slower cooling rate can increase the fatigue limit and the slower cooled gears have higher compressive residual stresses compared to the faster cooled gears.
The impact of cooling rate during high-pressure gas quenching on the fatigue performance of low-pressure carburized spur gears was studied for steel grades 20MnCr5 and 17NiCrMo6-4. The results show an increased fatigue limit by 10 to 11% when applying a slower cooling rate for both steel grades. Moreover, for 20MnCr5 the slower cooled gears show an increase in compressive residual stresses by 130 MPa compared to the faster cooling, although no significant difference was observed for 17NiCrMo6-4. It is also seen that the cooling rate affects the core hardness for both steel grades, while other properties like surface hardness, case-hardness depth and martensite variant pairing were unaffected. The results for the retained austenite content and average martensite unit size show no clear effect of the cooling rate. The possible influence of different carbon distributions after quenching for the two used cooling rates on the carbide precipitation and fatigue limit is discussed.

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