File(s) under permanent embargo
EBSD and AFM observations of the microstructural changes induced by low temperature plasma carburising on AISI 316
journal contribution
posted on 2011-10-15, 00:00 authored by Santiago Corujeira Gallo, H DongLow temperature plasma carburising (LTPC) has been increasingly accepted as a hardening process for austenitic stainless steels because it produces a good combination of tribological and corrosion properties. The hardening mechanism is based on the supersaturation of the austenitic structure with carbon, which greatly hardens the material, significantly expands the fcc unit cell, produces high levels of compressive residual stresses and, ultimately, leads to the occurrence of deformation bands and rotation of the crystal lattice. The microstructural changes introduced during plasma carburising have a significant impact on the mechanical, tribological and corrosion performance and, for this reason, the microstructure of expanded austenite or S-phase has been extensively studied. However, modern surface characterisation techniques could provide new insights into the formation mechanism of S-phase layers. In this work, backscattered electron diffraction and atomic force microscopy were used to characterise the surface layers of expanded austenite produced by LTPC in an active screen furnace. Based on the experimental results, the plastic deformation, its dependence on crystallographic orientation, the evolution of grain boundaries, and their effects on mechanical, tribological and corrosion properties are discussed.
History
Journal
Applied surface scienceVolume
258Issue
1Pagination
608 - 613Publisher
ElsevierLocation
Amsterdam, The NetherlandsPublisher DOI
ISSN
0169-4332Language
engPublication classification
C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journalCopyright notice
2011, ElsevierUsage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Plasma carburisingActive screenExpanded austeniteMicrostructureScience & TechnologyPhysical SciencesTechnologyChemistry, PhysicalMaterials Science, Coatings & FilmsPhysics, AppliedPhysics, Condensed MatterChemistryMaterials SciencePhysicsAUSTENITIC STAINLESS-STEELINTERGRANULAR CORROSIONSLIDING WEARCARBONRESISTANCE