BWmatleng
Materials
- Jan 30, 2007
- 6
I have a T23 tube with a reported analysis of:
carbon 0.07 (ASTM required 0.04 - 0.10)
manganese 0.45 (0.10 - 0.60)
silicon 0.32 (0.50 max)
nickel 0.11 (not listed)
chromium 2.08 (1.90 - 2.60)
tungsten 1.61 (1.45 - 1.75)
molybdenum 0.12 (0.05 - 0.30)
copper 0.15 (not listed)
titanium 0.001 (not listed)
vanadium 0.22 (0.20 - 0.30)
niobium 0.037 (0.02 - 0.08)
aluminum 0.003 (0.03 max)
boron 0.002 (0.0005 - 0.005)
nitrogen 0.013 (0.03 max)
2 different tube manufacturers estimate that heating this material at 1940F with air cool should result in 300-320 BHN. With a reasonable quench from the same temp the resulting hardness should be 320-350 BHN.
While evaluating a new heat treater, a third tube manufacturer found that the hardness was not met after normalizing in a continuous roller hearth furnace. The resulting hardness was 156/179 BHN.
Further testing by the manufacturer showed:
Normalize in a batch furnace (a different heat treat vendor) resulted in 207/217 BHN.
Normalize in a lab furnace resulted in 217/229 BHN, with a microstructure of blocky ferrite and fine, unresolvable pearlite.
Air quenching with fans resulted in 235/262 BHN, with a microstructure of blocky ferrite, but this time with fine pearlite and possibly some small amount of bainite.
Water quenching resulted in 277/311 BHN, with a microstructure that was essentially bainitic.
In every case the hardness appears to be 70-80 brinell points below what the curves predict.
We found:
A normalize in a lab furnace resulted in 228 BHN with a microstructure of blocky ferrite, unresolvable pearlite, some amount bainite.
A normalize in a lab furnace using a fan to accelerate air cooling resulted in 216/222 BHN with a microstructure of what looked like ferrite and bainite.
A water quench after heating in a lab furnace resulted in 258 BHN, but the structure still looked like ferrite and bainite.
Heating in a lab furnace with a water quench of P23 pipe resulted in 250/253 BHN with a microstructure of bainite.
We obtained a different heat of T23, from a different manufacturer with a reported analysis of:
carbon 0.07
manganese 0.49
silicon 0.24
nickel 0.13
chromium 2.09
tungsten 1.70
molybdenum 0.17
copper 0.10
titanium --- (not listed)
vanadium 0.221
niobium 0.031
aluminum 0.012
boron 0.002
nitrogen 0.0076
The MTR states the hardness after N&T as 179/191 BHN.
We normalized the sample in a lab furnace with air cooling (no acceleration of cooling) and the resulting hardness was 216/234 BHN with a microstructure that looked like ferrite and bainite.
Does anyone have an idea of why the required hardness that is predicted by industry accepted curves is not being acheived? Any ideas on why we can't get bainite, as expected?
carbon 0.07 (ASTM required 0.04 - 0.10)
manganese 0.45 (0.10 - 0.60)
silicon 0.32 (0.50 max)
nickel 0.11 (not listed)
chromium 2.08 (1.90 - 2.60)
tungsten 1.61 (1.45 - 1.75)
molybdenum 0.12 (0.05 - 0.30)
copper 0.15 (not listed)
titanium 0.001 (not listed)
vanadium 0.22 (0.20 - 0.30)
niobium 0.037 (0.02 - 0.08)
aluminum 0.003 (0.03 max)
boron 0.002 (0.0005 - 0.005)
nitrogen 0.013 (0.03 max)
2 different tube manufacturers estimate that heating this material at 1940F with air cool should result in 300-320 BHN. With a reasonable quench from the same temp the resulting hardness should be 320-350 BHN.
While evaluating a new heat treater, a third tube manufacturer found that the hardness was not met after normalizing in a continuous roller hearth furnace. The resulting hardness was 156/179 BHN.
Further testing by the manufacturer showed:
Normalize in a batch furnace (a different heat treat vendor) resulted in 207/217 BHN.
Normalize in a lab furnace resulted in 217/229 BHN, with a microstructure of blocky ferrite and fine, unresolvable pearlite.
Air quenching with fans resulted in 235/262 BHN, with a microstructure of blocky ferrite, but this time with fine pearlite and possibly some small amount of bainite.
Water quenching resulted in 277/311 BHN, with a microstructure that was essentially bainitic.
In every case the hardness appears to be 70-80 brinell points below what the curves predict.
We found:
A normalize in a lab furnace resulted in 228 BHN with a microstructure of blocky ferrite, unresolvable pearlite, some amount bainite.
A normalize in a lab furnace using a fan to accelerate air cooling resulted in 216/222 BHN with a microstructure of what looked like ferrite and bainite.
A water quench after heating in a lab furnace resulted in 258 BHN, but the structure still looked like ferrite and bainite.
Heating in a lab furnace with a water quench of P23 pipe resulted in 250/253 BHN with a microstructure of bainite.
We obtained a different heat of T23, from a different manufacturer with a reported analysis of:
carbon 0.07
manganese 0.49
silicon 0.24
nickel 0.13
chromium 2.09
tungsten 1.70
molybdenum 0.17
copper 0.10
titanium --- (not listed)
vanadium 0.221
niobium 0.031
aluminum 0.012
boron 0.002
nitrogen 0.0076
The MTR states the hardness after N&T as 179/191 BHN.
We normalized the sample in a lab furnace with air cooling (no acceleration of cooling) and the resulting hardness was 216/234 BHN with a microstructure that looked like ferrite and bainite.
Does anyone have an idea of why the required hardness that is predicted by industry accepted curves is not being acheived? Any ideas on why we can't get bainite, as expected?