amyh33
Materials
- Aug 13, 2003
- 9
The application is a laser hardened steel corrugated roll that is cracking and peeling a small layer of material at the top of the flute - slightly off center. Locations of failures do not appear to follow any geometric pattern, but each crack is identical. The failures are occurring during the chrome plating process in the plating bath. Cracks appear to start across the top of the flute perpendicular to roll length (and perpendicular to grinding direction). After a depth of approximately 1-2 mm, the crack bifurcates to travel in the direction of the roll length. It is evident that the material fracture is occurring early in the plating process as the fracture surfaces are chrome plated. It is curious that all the failures are the same configuration and path. some are worse than others and all seem to be oriented off center. To explain: If you consider the profile of a flute being a side profile of a hill, the material is peeling off on the "down-side" of the hill consistently- just slightly off center if the hill top is center.
At first hydrogen embrittlement was suspected, but since the cracks are propagating in the plating bath instead of afterwards and also the consistent configuration and dimensions of the crack growth makes me believe it is related somehow to processing.
Flutes are rough ground, laser hardened to Rc 58-60, then finish ground prior to plating. The initial cracks perpendicular to the flute length (and grinding direction) are typical of grinding cracks - but typically, these blunt in the gullets rather than split to travel along the flute length.
Any guidance on clues to look for in the microstructures and fracture surfaces would be appreciated!
At first hydrogen embrittlement was suspected, but since the cracks are propagating in the plating bath instead of afterwards and also the consistent configuration and dimensions of the crack growth makes me believe it is related somehow to processing.
Flutes are rough ground, laser hardened to Rc 58-60, then finish ground prior to plating. The initial cracks perpendicular to the flute length (and grinding direction) are typical of grinding cracks - but typically, these blunt in the gullets rather than split to travel along the flute length.
Any guidance on clues to look for in the microstructures and fracture surfaces would be appreciated!