Effectiveness of reducing agents during sintering of Cr-prealloyed PM steels
Journal article, 2014

Development of strong inter-particle necks requires successful removal of surface oxides, present on the powder particles, during the initial stages of sintering. In the case of water-atomised powder prealloyed with chromium, the surface oxide consists mainly of an iron oxide layer with some more stable fine particulate oxides. The formation of sufficiently strong inter-particle necks requires as a minimum full removal of the iron surface oxide layer. This can be achieved by gaseous reducing agents (e.g. H2, CO or a mixture of both) or by carbon, typically admixed in the form of graphite. The reducing power of various sintering atmospheres (active gas content #10 vol.-%) and their combined effect with graphite has been investigated by a thermal analysis technique. Results indicate that a combination of a dry hydrogen containing atmosphere and fine graphite allows successful sintering of chromium alloyed PM steels.

oxide reduction

carbothermal reduction

sintering atmosphere

Cr-alloyed PM steel

Author

Eduard Hryha

Chalmers, Materials and Manufacturing Technology, Surface and Microstructure Engineering

Lars Nyborg

Chalmers, Materials and Manufacturing Technology, Surface and Microstructure Engineering

Published in

Powder Metallurgy

0032-5899 (ISSN) 1743-2901 (eISSN)

Vol. 57 Issue 4 p. 245-250

Categorizing

Driving Forces

Sustainable development

Areas of Advance

Production

Subject Categories (SSIF 2011)

Other Materials Engineering

Metallurgy and Metallic Materials

Identifiers

DOI

10.1179/0032589914Z.000000000192

More information

Created

10/8/2017