Sintered Steels Prealloyed with Manganese – Chances and Risks
Paper in proceeding, 2010

Manganese as an alloying element in sintered steels offers technical and commercial advantages; so far it has been used however only tentatively and added mainly through admixing. Here it is shown that also prealloying can be a viable route since the adverse effect of Mn on the compressibility is markedly less than commonly assumed, and the compacts shrink during sintering, in contrast to expansion with the mixed variants. Sintering of Mn prealloyed steel compacts is similar to the route used for Cr-Mo prealloyed grades, the main reduction stage being carbothermic reduction at T>1000°C, although in reducing atmospheres part of the surface oxides can be removed at T < 500°C. Generally, sintering at T>1200°C is recommended to ensure sufficient oxygen removal. The main problem with Mn, the tendency to Mn loss at the surfaces by evaporation during sintering must be considered also here, but it is alleviated by prealloying compared to admixing, due to the lower initial activity of Mn in prealloyed materials.

Mn-alloying

thermogravimetry

PM steels

Author

Herbert Danninger

Vienna University of Technology

M Jaliliziyaeian

Vienna University of Technology

Christian Gierl

Vienna University of Technology

Eduard Hryha

Chalmers, Materials and Manufacturing Technology, Surface and Microstructure Engineering

Sven Bengtsson

Höganäs

World Powder Metallurgy Congress and Exhibition, World PM 2010; Florence; Italy; 10 October 2010 through 14 October 2010

Vol. 3 3-10
9781899072125 (ISBN)

Subject Categories

Other Materials Engineering

ISBN

9781899072125

More information

Latest update

8/1/2018 3