Heat Treatment of Steel
Various types of heat treatment processes are used to change the following properties or conditions of the steel:
Improve the
toughness
Increase the
hardness
Increase the
ductility
Improve the
machinability
Refine the
grain structure
Remove the
residual stresses
Improve the
wear resistance
The following are the general reasons for heat treatment:
Hardening
(Steels can be heat treated to high hardness and strength levels. The
reasons for doing this are obvious. Structural components subjected to
high operating stress need the high strength of a hardened structure.
Similarly, tools such as dies, knives, cutting devices, and forming
devices need a hardened structure to resist wear and deformation.)
Tempering
(As-quenched hardened steels are so brittle that even slight impacts may
cause fracture. Tempering is a heat treatment that reduces the
brittleness of a steel without significantly lowering its hardness and
strength. All hardened steels must be tempered before use.)
Softening a
Hardened Structure (Hardening is reversible. If a hardened tool
needs to be remachined, it may be softened by heat treatment to return
it to its machinable condition. Most steels weld better in their soft
state than in their hardened state; softening may be used to aid
weldability.)
Recrystallization
(If a metal is cold worked, grains or crystals deform, become elongated,
and in doing so harden and strengthen a metal. There is a limiting
amount of cold work that a particular metal can be subjected to. In
rolling of steel into thin sheets, you can only reduce the
cross-sectional area so much before it gets too hard to roll. At this
point it would be desirable to return the grains to their original
shape. Heat treatment can accomplish this. The transformation of
cold-worked grains to an undistorted shape is called
recrystallization. Very large coarse grains can also be refined by
recrystallization.This type of heat treatment is essential if a steel is
to be subjected to severe cold working in rolling, drawing, etc.)
Stress
Relief (One of the most frequent reasons for heat treatment is to
remove internal stress from a metal that has been subjected to cold
working or welding. Stress relieving is a heat treatment used to remove
internal strains without significantly lowering the strength. It is used
where close dimensional control is needed on weldments, forgings,
castings, etc.)
Hot-Working
Operations (Most metal shapes produced by steel mills are at least
rough shaped at elevated temperatures. Heat treating is required to
bring the rough metal shapes to the proper temperature for hot-forming
operations.Forging, hot rolling, roll welding, and the like are all
performed at temperatures of sufficient magnitude as to prevent the
formation of distorted grains that will harden the metals. Hot-working
operations require dynamic recrystallization which is achieved by
working at the proper hot-work temperatures.)
Diffusion
of Alloying Elements (One of the criteria for hardening a steel is
that it have sufficient carbon content. Low carbon steels can be
hardened, at least on the surface, by heat treating at an elevated
temperature in an atmosphere containing an alloying element that will
diffuse into the steel and allow surface hardening on quenching. Carbon
is frequently diffused into the surface of soft steels for surface
hardening. Using this same principle, elements such as chromium, boron,
nitrogen, and silicon can be diffused in the surface of a steel for
special purposes.)
Figure 1 shows major types of heat treatment processes.
