Hybrid quench process for hot stamping of steel parts
11198915 · 2021-12-14
Assignee
Inventors
- Raj Sohmshetty (Canton, MI, US)
- Constantin Chiriac (Windsor, CA)
- Mikhail Minevich (Southfield, MI, US)
- Jason Balzer (Commerce Township, MI, US)
- S. George LUCKEY, JR. (Dearborn, MI, US)
Cpc classification
C22C38/002
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C21D1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C21D1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method of quenching a press hardenable steel is provided. The method includes an initial step of die quenching a part stamped within a stamping die followed by a partial quenching after the initial step of die quenching. In various methods, the press hardenable steel is a 36MnB5 grade steel and/or the initial step of die quenching is performed at a temperature of approximately 200° C.±10° C. in a die configured for 36MnB5 grade steel. At least one method further includes opening the die followed by the partial quenching, the partial quenching comprising spraying a cooling liquid onto the part to reduce a temperature of the part below approximately 130° C.±10° C., with the option of spraying to reduce the temperature of the part below approximately 100° C.±10° C.
Claims
1. A method of quenching a press hardenable steel (PHS) comprising an initial step of die quenching a part stamped within a stamping die followed by a partial quenching after the initial step of die quenching, wherein there is no pre-quench step prior to the initial step of die quenching, the initial step of die quenching quenches the part within the stamping die to a temperature of approximately 200° C.±10° C. and the partial quenching reduces a temperature of the stamped part from approximately 200° C.±10° C. to below approximately 130° C.±10° C.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the PHS has a composition comprising: manganese greater than zero and up to 1.4 wt. %; silicon greater than zero and up to 0.7 wt. %; carbon greater than zero and up to 0.37 wt. %; and boron greater than zero and up to 0.005 wt. %.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the stamping die is configured for a PHS comprising: manganese greater than zero and up to 1.4 wt. %; silicon greater than zero and up to 0.4 wt. %; carbon greater than zero and up to 0.25 wt. %; and boron greater than zero and up to 0.005 wt. %.
4. The method according to claim 1 further comprising opening the stamping die followed by the partial quenching, the partial quenching, wherein the partial quenching comprises spraying a cooling liquid onto the part.
5. The method according to claim 4, wherein the spraying reduces the temperature of the part below approximately 100° C.±10° C.
6. The method according to claim 4, wherein the cooling liquid is selected from the group consisting of water, chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), diesters, esters, glycol, polyglycol, synthetic fluids, semi-synthetic fluids, water and salt, water and oil, and combinations thereof.
7. A part manufactured according to the method of claim 1.
8. The method according to claim 1 further comprising: opening the stamping die and transferring the part to a chiller, wherein the partial quenching comprises cooling the part in the chiller to reduce a temperature of the part below approximately 130° C.±10° C.; and transferring the part to a rack.
9. The method according to claim 8, wherein the cooling in the chiller reduces the temperature of the part below approximately 100° C.±10° C.
10. The method according to claim 8, wherein the chiller includes a flow and filtration system.
11. The method according to claim 8, wherein the part is vertically oriented within the chiller during the partial quenching.
12. The method according to claim 8, wherein the chiller includes a cooling liquid selected from the group consisting of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), diesters, esters, glycol, polyglycol, synthetic fluids, semi-synthetic fluids, water, a combination of water and salt, a combination of water and oil, and combinations thereof.
13. The method according to claim 12, wherein the cooling liquid is agitated.
14. The method according to claim 8, wherein the part has a thick portion and a thin portion with a thickness less than the thick portion, and the thick portion of the part enters the chiller before the thin portion of the part.
Description
DRAWINGS
(1) In order that the disclosure may be well understood, there will now be described various forms thereof, given by way of example, reference being made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
(7)
(8)
(9)
(10)
(11)
(12) The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(13) The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
(14) Generally, to address issues related to forming a press hardenable steel (PHS) while using manufacturing equipment designed for 22MnB5 grade PHS, the present disclosure partially quenches a 36MnB5 PHS to less than or equal to about 200° C.±10° C. during a stamping operation.
(15) This improvement in press hardening of 36MnB5 steels was unexpected because there was no indication that an extra (supplemental) quenching processing step would be beneficial and cost effective. This is because industry commercialization efforts are using new manufacturing equipment tailored for 36MnB5 steels, as 36MnB5 steels are more sensitive to variations in cooling profiles than 22MnB5 grade steel.
(16) The inventors discovered that between production conditions for 22MnB5 grade steel and 36MnB5 grade steel, die quench time for 36MnB5 grade steel would be significantly higher than 22MnB5 grade steel. The inventors also discovered that the yield strength (YS) and the ultimate tensile strength (UTS) of 36MnB5 grade steel would be lower than the specification using existing production equipment/processing. This is reflected below in Table 1:
(17) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 22MnB5 and 36MnB5 grade steel simulated press hardening on a 22MnB5 grade steel production path with about a 210° C. part extraction temperature YS UTS Specimen (MPa) (MPa) % EL 22MnB5 PHS #112 1013 1456 18 22MnB5 PHS #114 1050 1468 17 Ave 1031.5 1462 17.5 36MnB5 PHS #109 1247 1824 12 36MnB5 PHS #110 1235 1821 15 Ave 1241 1822.5 13.5 Specification ≥1400 ≥1800 ≥4
(18) As shown, 22MnB5 grade steel properties for YS and UTS are within the specification for typical production part extraction temperature of about 200° C. However, the yield strength for 36MnB5 grade steel processed with 22MnB5 grade steel typical production part extraction temperatures were below the 36MnB5 yield strength specification of greater than or equal to 1400 MPa.
(19) Referring to
(20) Referring to
(21) According to the present disclosure, one method to reduce 36MnB5 grade steel quench time is to reduce the Time-Temperature-Transformation (TTT) relationship and therefore the time to quench the 36MnB5 grade steel. Numerous analyses and testing resulted in the processing parameters of TABLE 2 below and the relationships shown
(22) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 36MnB5 grade steel Time-Temperature- Transformation quenching parameters 22MnB5 36MnB5 36MnB5 grade steel grade steel grade steel Plate thickness (mm) 1.5 1.5 1.5 Die contact pressure (MPa) 19.1 19.1 19.1 Die contact heat transfer 2302 2302 2302 coefficient (W/K*m{circumflex over ( )}2) Die thermal conductivity (W/K*m) 28 28 28 Die surface absorptivity 0.6 0.6 0.6 Die steady state average 83 83 83 temperature (° C.) Part quench temperature (° C.) 200 ± 10 200 ± 10 100 ± 10 Time to quench (seconds) ~4.7 ~4.7 ~9** Distance to cooling channel (mm) 10 10 10 Ave. YS (MPa) ~1030 ~1240* ≥1400 Ave. UTS (MPa) ~1460 ~1822* ≥1800 *Below material specification **Cost-prohibitive for low, medium, or high-volume production
(23) The die contact pressure is the pressure between the die and the steel and the distance to cooling channel is the distance between the center of the cooling channel to the die contact surface. Further, as die thermal conductivity increases, the abrasive resistance of the die reduces, therefore an abrasive resistant coating and/or surface hardening of the dies may be desired.
(24) In one form, the present disclosure provides a method in which the mold or die is opened after the hot blank has been formed. More specifically, the mold or die is opened when the formed blank or part is at a temperature between the martensite start temperature and the martensite finish temperature of the formed blank. A cooling liquid or cooling media is sprayed into the open die onto the formed blank to reduce the temperature to less than or equal to 100° C. The cooling liquid may be applied as a mist, slurry, powder, or combinations thereof. The cooling liquid may include chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), diesters, esters, glycol, polyglycol, synthetic fluids, semi-synthetic fluids, water, a combination of water and salt, a combination of water and oil, combinations thereof, and any other type of coolant mixture to control and modify the cooling rate of the formed blank or die surface. In one form, a fan enables convective cooling of the formed blank, the die, and moves the cooling liquid.
(25) In another form of the present disclosure, the formed blank is transferred to a chiller or chilling system. The chiller or chilling system cools the part to a temperature to less than or equal to 100° C. (“target temperature”). The cooled formed blank is then transferred to a rack. The chiller or chilling system includes a flow system to maintain the target temperature and a filtration system to reduce contaminants in the coolant.
(26) The inventors have discovered that different cooling liquids, cooling fluids, and cooling media have different effects on the characteristics of the cooled or quenched part. Some cooling media distort, crack, or otherwise decrease the properties (e.g. mechanical or aesthetic) of the cooled part. Mixing cooling liquids together often mitigates the decreases in properties of the cooled part. As an example, water may cool the part too quickly leading to cracks or distortion. By adding chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), diesters, esters, glycol, polyglycol, synthetic fluids, semi-synthetic fluids, salt (up to 20%), oil, and combinations thereof (for example synthetic fluids are often diluted 3-10%), or another material to the water that improves the cooling rate, cracks or distortion due to the quench may be inhibited. Other methods to mitigate decreases in quenched properties include:
(27) heating the cooling liquid;
(28) cooling the heating liquid;
(29) cooling long parts vertically;
(30) cooling flat parts on edge;
(31) cooling thick sections first or preferentially; and
(32) agitating the cooling liquid to reduce vaporization (e.g. steam) of the cooling liquid.
(33) The present provides methods of manufacture that produce 36MnB5 or equivalent grade PHS in about the same cycle time as 22MnB5 grade PHS with 22MnB5 grade steel processing and manufacturing equipment.
(34) More specifically, and referring to
(35) In a variation of this method, the partial quenching is one of spraying a cooling liquid onto the part and cooling the part in a chiller to reduce a temperature of the part below approximately 130° C.±10° C. (“target temperature”).
(36) Referring now to
(37) In another method of the present disclosure, the PHS has a composition comprising, in weight percent (wt. %): manganese greater than zero and up to 1.4 wt. %; silicon greater than zero and up to 0.7 wt. %; carbon greater than zero and up to 0.37 wt. %; and boron greater than zero and up to 0.005 wt. % as shown below in TABLE 3.
(38) TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 Minimum Maximum Element wt. % wt. % Boron >0 0.005 Carbon >0 0.37 Manganese >0 1.4 Silicon >0 0.7 Iron Balance Balance
(39) In at least one method of the present disclosure, the initial step of die quenching is performed in a die configured for a PHS comprising: manganese greater than zero and up to 1.4 wt. %; silicon greater than zero and up to 0.4 wt. %; carbon greater than zero and up to 0.25 wt. %; and boron greater than zero and up to 0.005 wt. % as shown below in TABLE 4.
(40) TABLE-US-00004 TABLE 4 Minimum Maximum Element wt. % wt. % Boron >0 0.005 Carbon >0 0.25 Manganese >0 1.4 Silicon >0 0.4 Iron Balance Balance
(41) In various methods of the present disclosure, the initial step of die quenching is performed at a temperature of approximately 200° C.±10° C.
(42) Yet another method of the present disclosure comprises opening the die followed by the partial quenching, and the partial quenching comprises spraying a cooling liquid onto the part to reduce a temperature of the part below approximately 130° C.±10° C. In a variation of this method, the spraying reduces the temperature of the part below approximately 100° C.±10° C. The cooling liquid is selected from the group consisting of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), diesters, esters, glycol, polyglycol, synthetic fluids, semi-synthetic fluids, water, a combination of water and salt, a combination of water and oil, and combinations thereof.
(43) Still another method according to the present disclosure comprises opening the die and transferring the part to a chiller, wherein the partial quenching comprises cooling the part in the chiller to reduce a temperature of the part below approximately 130° C.±10° C.; and then transferring the part to a rack or other containment or inventory device. In a variation of this method, the cooling in the chiller reduces the temperature of the part to below approximately 100° C.±10° C.
(44) In form, the chiller includes a flow and filtration system. In another form, the part is vertically oriented within the chiller during the partial quenching. In yet another form, the chiller includes a cooling liquid selected from the group consisting of chlorofluorocarbons (CFCs), diesters, esters, glycol, polyglycol, synthetic fluids, semi-synthetic fluids, water, a combination of water and salt, a combination of water and oil, and combinations thereof. In yet form, the cooling liquid is agitated. In still another form, a thicker portion of the part enters the chiller before other thinner portions of the part. A flow and filtration system may also be provided.
(45) Referring to
(46) Additionally, various parts may be formed according the teachings of the present disclosure.
(47) Throughout the application, with respect to process or measurable variables (temperature, composition, time, etc.), “approximate,” “about,” “˜,” and similar expressions indicate that the value is within manufacturing tolerances and variabilities as determined by regular practice in the industry and machine capability.
(48) The description of the disclosure is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the substance of the disclosure are intended to be within the scope of the disclosure. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the disclosure.