ARTICLES WITH NITROGEN ALLOY PROTECTIVE LAYER AND METHODS OF MAKING SAME
20200407830 ยท 2020-12-31
Assignee
Inventors
- Pravansu S. Mohanty (Canton, MI, US)
- Ramcharan VISVESWARAN (Novi, MI, US)
- Vikram Varadaraajan (Novi, MI, US)
Cpc classification
B22F2007/042
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22C33/0228
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B32B15/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/012
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B32B15/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
Provided are materials that include one or more metals in solid solution with a level of nitrogen that is at a concentration higher than the a solubility limit of nitrogen in the alloy in a liquid state at atmospheric pressure. The materials may be utilized as a protective layer on a substrate, such as an Al containing substrate. Also provided are methods of forming the solid solution materials and articles employing them on a surface of a substrate.
Claims
1. A three dimensional article comprising: a high nitrogen content solid solution material, the solid solution material in the form of a powder prior to assembly into the article; the high nitrogen content solid solution comprising an alloy formed of a solid solution of one or more metals and nitrogen, the nitrogen present in a concentration in the alloy higher than a solubility limit of nitrogen in the alloy in a liquid state at atmospheric pressure wherein the alloy is optionally substantially free of nitride compound precipitates.
2. The article of claim 1 wherein the alloy is free of nitride compound precipitates.
3. The article of claim 1 wherein the alloy comprises: Fe as a predominant; Mn, the Mn present at up to 35 weight percent; Ni at up to 20 wt %; C at up to 0.2 wt %, or combinations thereof.
4. The article of claim 1 wherein nitrogen is present in the alloy at 0.05 weight percent to 2.0 weight percent.
5-7. (canceled)
8. The article of claim 1 wherein the alloy comprises an austenite metal alloy.
9. The article of claim 1 wherein the alloy has an FCC structure, the FCC structure defining 50% or greater the structure of the alloy.
10. (canceled)
11. The article claim 1 wherein the alloy is free of BCC structure.
12. An article comprising: a substrate comprising a surface; and a protective layer on at least a portion of the surface, the protective layer comprising an alloy having a solid solution of one or more metals and nitrogen, the nitrogen present at a concentration higher than a solubility limit of nitrogen in the alloy in a liquid state at atmospheric pressure.
13. The article of claim 12 wherein the interface is a metallurgical bond between the substrate and the protective layer.
14. The article of claim 12 wherein the protective layer is free of nitride compound precipitates.
15. The article of claim 12 wherein the concentration of nitrogen in the protective layer is uniform, or wherein the concentration of nitrogen in the protective layer varies as a gradient through a thickness of the protective layer.
16-21. (canceled)
22. The article of any one of claims 12-16 wherein the substrate comprises Al, a metal alloy, or an alloy of two or more elements of Al, Si, B, Cr, Co, Cu, Ga, Au, In, Fe, Pb, Mg, Ni, C, a rare earth (e.g. La, Y, Sc or other), Na, Ti, Mo, Sr, V, W, Sn, Ur, Zn, Zr, and any combination thereof.
23-32. (canceled)
33. The article of any one of claims 12-16 wherein the protective layer has an FCC structure, the FCC structure defining 50% or greater the structure of the protective layer.
34-35. (canceled)
36. The article of any one of claims 12-16 wherein the protective layer comprises one or more anchors, the one or more anchors penetrating a surface of the substrate.
37. A method of producing an article comprising: providing a solid protective layer material, the solid protective layer material comprising an high nitrogen content alloy formed of a solid solution of one or more metals and nitrogen, the nitrogen present in a concentration in the alloy higher than a solubility limit of nitrogen in the alloy in a liquid state at atmospheric pressure, contacting the solid protective layer material with a surface of a substrate, and forming a metallurgic bond between the solid protective layer and the substrate at the surface while maintaining the protective layer material substantially solid.
38. The method of claim 37 wherein the solid protective layer material is in the form of a powder, or wherein the solid protective layer material is in the form of a strip, the strip optionally substantially flat.
39. (canceled)
40. The method of claim 37 wherein the metallurgic bond is formed by fiction welding, or wherein the substrate, the protective material or both are oscillated to form the metallurgic bond.
41. (canceled)
42. The method of claim 37 wherein neither the protective layer material nor the substrate are transitioned to a liquid during the forming.
43. The method of claim 37 wherein the precursor material is contacted to the substrate surface by ejection from a nozzle and the bonding occurs by adiabatic shear instability.
44. The method of claim 37 wherein the substrate is in the form of a fluid or semi-solid when contacting the solid protective layer material, wherein the melting temperature of the protective layer material is greater than the temperature of the substrate.
45-66. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0014] Exemplary aspects will become more fully understood from the detailed description and the accompanying drawings, wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0034] Various modes for carrying out the present invention are disclosed herein; however, it is to be understood that the disclosed modes are merely exemplary of the invention that may be embodied in various and alternative forms. The figures are not necessarily to scale; some features may be exaggerated or minimized to show details of particular components. Therefore, specific structural and functional details disclosed herein are not to be interpreted as limiting, but merely as a representative basis for teaching one skilled in the art to variously employ the present invention.
[0035] Reference will now be made in detail to compositions, aspects and methods of the present disclosure. It is also to be understood that this disclosure is not limited to the specific aspects and methods described herein, as specific components and/or conditions may, of course, vary. Furthermore, the terminology used herein is used only for the purpose of describing particular aspects of the present disclosure and is not intended to be limiting in any way.
[0036] It must also be noted that, as used in the specification and the appended claims, the singular form a, an, and the comprise plural referents unless the context clearly indicates otherwise. For example, reference to a component in the singular is intended to comprise a plurality of components unless explicitly noted otherwise.
[0037] Throughout this description, where publications are referenced, the disclosures of these publications in their entireties are hereby incorporated by reference to more fully describe the state of the art to which this disclosure pertains.
[0038] The following terms or phrases used herein have the exemplary meanings listed below in connection with at least one embodiment:
[0039] Precursor as used herein means the material deployed to fabricate the nitrogen containing protective layer on a substrate. In specific aspects, the solid powder or the thin strip intended for making the layer.
[0040] Composite as used herein means an article made up of several parts or elements. Specifically here, an object having a substrate and a protective layer intended to provide functionalities that are not otherwise provided by the individual elements alone.
[0041] Compound as used herein, means a material formed by reactions between elements having a stoichiometric ratio. Specifically examples include, Cr.sub.2N, F.sub.2N, TiN, etc.
[0042] Solid solution as used herein, means an alloy formed by dissolving one or more alloying element(s) in a host solid without changing its phase. In specific aspects as provided herein, -Fe[N], wherein N is the alloying element dissolved in FCC-Fe, the austenite phase.
[0043] The addition of nitrogen improves the strength, ductility and impact toughness in austenitic steels, while the fracture strain and fracture toughness are not affected at elevated temperatures. The strength of nitrogen alloyed austenitic steels arises from three components: strength of the matrix, grain boundary hardening, and solid solution hardening. The matrix strength is not appreciably impacted by nitrogen, rather correlates to the friction stress of the FCC (face centered cubic) lattice that is mainly controlled by the solid solution hardening of the substitutional elements like chromium and manganese. But, grain boundary hardening which occurs due to dislocation blocking at the grain boundaries, increases proportionally to the alloyed nitrogen content. The highest impact on the strength results from the interstitial solid solution of nitrogen. Nitrogen increases the concentration of free electrons promoting the covalent component of the interatomic bonding and the formation of CrN short range order (SRO). The occurrence of CrN SRO and the resultant interactions with dislocations and stacking faults are believed to play a major role in the deformation behavior of these alloys, and can be tailored to enhance the strength, ductility, and impact toughness.
[0044] The composition and temperature strongly influence the stacking fault energy (SFE) and in turn, the deformation mechanisms and strengthening behavior of austenitic steels. Increasing the SFE, causes the active deformation mechanisms to change and is generally favored to achieve pure dislocation glide and enhanced toughness. Specifically, the effect of N additions on the SFE in Cr and Mn alloyed steels is non-monotonic, exhibiting a minimum SFE at 0.4 wt. % N. The decrease in SFE at low N contents is believed due to the segregation of interstitial N atoms to stacking faults, however, at higher N contents the SFE increases as the bulk effect of interstitial solid solution becomes more pronounced. However, the formation of nitrides such as Cr.sub.2N, TiN, AlN, etc. at elevated N content, affects the distribution of alloying elements within the lattice and in turn diminishes the bulk effect of interstitial solid solution and the SFE. The formation of nitrides such as Cr.sub.2N occurs when the nitrogen content goes beyond a certain threshold value (depends on the overall composition of the alloy) and should be discouraged to take advantage of the interstitial solid solution hardening phenomenon described above.
[0045] High nitrogen containing austenitic steels also exhibit excellent resistance to atmospheric corrosion. However, the corrosion resistance is also strongly influenced by the nitrogen content. At low N contents, the formation of phase (an intermetallic compound with Cr) at the grain boundaries as well as the formation of nitrides such as Cr.sub.2N at high nitrogen content are detrimental to the corrosion resistance of these steels. Best corrosion resistance can be achieved if all nitrogen is in solid solution, i.e. no nitrides are precipitated. Referring to
[0046] One approach to obtain a homogeneous dissolved nitrogen content in a steel alloy, specifically in austenitic steel is to (i) dissolve the nitrogen into the alloy in liquid state and then (ii) solidify the alloy without losing the dissolved nitrogen during solidification. However, both the tasks have their own challenges. For example, the nitrogen solubility in liquid iron at atmospheric pressure is very low (0.045 wt. % at 1600 C.). Nitrogen in liquid alloy increases by the square root of the partial pressure (Sievert's square root law). Hence, to introduce higher nitrogen into liquid iron/steel, melting should be done using a high pressure nitrogen environment. Nitrogen alloying in the molten state may be achieved by high pressure induction or electric arc furnaces, pressure electro slag remelting furnace (PERS), and plasma arc and high-pressure melting with hot isostatic processing (HIP) etc.
[0047] Further, it is also known that the addition of certain elements such as chromium, manganese vanadium, niobium, and titanium increases the nitrogen solubility, while addition of elements such as carbon, silicon, and nickel reduces the nitrogen solubility. Hence, in order to induce high nitrogen concentrations into the melt, chromium and manganese can be added and nickel should be avoided. Furthermore, in some aspects, elements such as vanadium, niobium, and titanium, are absent or present in insignificant amounts as they are powerful nitride formers.
[0048] While chromium addition significantly enhances nitrogen solubility in the melt, it is also a strong -ferrite stabilizer. As illustrated in
[0049] Now referring to
[0050] One main problem for the production of austenitic steels containing high manganese is the strong segregation behavior of manganese that leads to heterogenic microstructure; which is detrimental to the mechanical behavior as well as corrosion resistance. Further, as discussed above, precipitation of 6 phase or nitrides such as Cr.sub.2N should be avoided during processing to achieve high toughness and corrosion resistance. The segregation and precipitation issues can be suppressed or completely eliminated by rapidly solidifying the alloy.
[0051] In summary, the production of high nitrogen containing austenitic steels by prior methods requires a balanced control of the alloy composition and precise adjustment of the melting and solidification conditions. Due to their desirable toughness and corrosion resistance, these steels are being targeted for structural applications in transportation, energy, medical and food industry. However, their toughness and corrosion resistance can also be exploited to provide protective layers on articles as an effective solution to the problems associated with traditional nitriding and nitride coatings, which is one aspect of the teachings of this disclosure. Further, the fabrication challenges associated with the high dissolved nitrogen containing alloys especially as a protective layer on articles, need to be solved to pave the way for practical industrial applications, which is another aspect of the present disclosure.
[0052] Metallic protective layers are commonly applied by plating or additive deposition processes such as plasma spraying, laser cladding, sputtering, etc. As will be appreciated, implementing these techniques to add a protective layer exhibiting the desired characteristics, e.g., homogeneous nitrogen content in solid solution state having homogeneous microstructure with high toughness and resistance to atmospheric corrosion onto another substrate is technically very challenging and cost intensive. Metal plating in aqueous salt solution cannot provide the desired dissolved nitrogen in the deposited layer. Further, dip coating in molten metal bath to provide high dissolved nitrogen faces many challenges. The process needs to operate at high nitrogen pressure. High melting point alloys like steel can only be plated on substrates that have higher melting point than the coating alloy. High melting point alloys such as steel or titanium are typically deposited by processes (plasma spraying, laser cladding etc.) wherein the precursor feed stock is melted and then consolidated to form the protective layer. These processes are commonly practiced either in a reduced pressure environment or at atmospheric pressure. As illustrated in
[0053] Provided is a composite article having a protective nitrogen alloy layer with a dissolved nitrogen content, the dissolved nitrogen content substantially higher than the solubility limit of N in the alloy in its liquid state at atmospheric pressure and optionally the nitrogen alloy layer being devoid of a nitride compound precipitates or nitride compound layer. A first exemplary aspect is explained hereinafter with reference to
[0054] A substrate 44 is optionally a surface that is flat, substantially flat, curvilinear, or other desired shape with concave, convex, or other surface configuration. The substrate may be or include a metal alloy. Illustrative examples of metal alloys include but are not limited to alloys that include Al, Si, B, Cr, Co, Cu, Ga, Au, In, Fe, Pb, Mg, Ni, C, a rare earth (e.g. La, Y, Sc or other), Na, Ti, Mo, Sr, V, W, Sn, Ur, Zn, Zr, and any combination thereof. In some aspects, a substrate includes Al or an alloy of Al. Optionally, a substrate includes Al at 80 wt % to 100 wt %. Optionally, a substrate includes a cast iron or a steel. Optionally, a substrate includes a Ti alloy.
[0055] A protective layer 42 includes a metal or metal alloy with dissolved N at a desired concentration so as to provide desired functionality in terms of toughness and corrosion resistance. A protective layer is optionally an austenite metal alloy, optionally that includes Fe as a predominant in the alloy. Optionally, a metal alloy includes N and Fe whereby the N is present at sufficient amount so as to promote an austenite structure. N is optionally present at a weight percent of 0.05 to 2 or any value or range therebetween. Optionally, N is present at a weight percent of 0.1 to 1.5, optionally 0.2 to 2, optionally 0.2 to 1.9, optionally 0.3 to 1.9, optionally 0.3 to 1.8, optionally 0.4 to 2, optionally 0.4 to 1.9, optionally 0.4 to 1.8, optionally 0.4 to 1.5. As will be further described below, the amount of N will be dependent on the desired fraction of austenite in the final material and the final composition of the material.
[0056] A protective layer 42 optionally includes Fe. Fe is optionally present at a predominant, optionally at a weight percent of 51 or greater, optionally 52 or greater, optionally 55 or greater. With Fe as a predominant an alloy is optionally a solid solution with FCC structure which is known as phase in the art, at the temperature at which the material is expected to be used, optionally 150 C. to 1000 C. The amount of N and other elements is optionally designed to promote the FCC structure of the metal alloy such that this structure is promoted and maintained at temperatures up to 1000 C. As such, the metal alloy is optionally substantially 100% FCC structure, optionally 99% FCC structure. Optionally, a metal alloy of a protective layer is 95% FCC structure or greater. Optionally, a metal alloy of a protective layer is 50% FCC structure or greater. Optionally, a protective layer alloy is free of other structure such as BCC.
[0057] In addition to nitrogen, a protective layer optionally includes one or more other elements that will promote FCC structure. For example, a protective layer optionally includes Mn. Mn, when present, may be provided at a weight percent of 0 to 35. Optionally, the weight percent of Mn is less than 30. Optionally, the weight percent of Mn is 19-27. Optionally, the weight percent of Mn is 20-26. The presence of N in such alloys serves to promote and stabilize a desired FCC structure even when the amount of Mn or other FCC promoting metal is less than 20 weight percent. As such, the dissolved N and Mn optionally work in concert to promote austenitic structure to the protective layer metal alloy. Optionally, the protective layer includes Ni, which also promotes austenitic structure. Ni, when present, may be provided at a weight percent of 0 to 20%. Since Ni reduces the N solubility in the protective layer, the Ni is optionally between 0 to 5 wt %. The protective layer may optionally include C, C when present, may be provided at a weight percent of 0 to 0.2%. While C improves N solubility, it also reduces the toughness of the resulting alloy. Optionally, the C is present in the alloy at 0 to 0.1 wt %.
[0058] As mentioned earlier, the strengthening mechanism in nitrogen alloy steel emerges from the formation of CrN SRO and hence Cr is optionally included in the provided N alloy. However, Cr is a -ferrite promoter as well as ferrite stabilizer. In order to control the phase of the protective layer, the ferrite stabilizing effect of Cr may be countered by adjusting the amount of N and/or Mn, both of which serve as austenite stabilizers. Further, the substrate material properties may also be taken into consideration in designing the provided alloy. For example, if the substrate is an aluminum alloy that has a FCC structure, the protective layer alloy may be 100% austenite (FCC) phase in order to match the substrate thermal coefficient of expansion. When the substrate is a ferritic cast iron or steel, a mixture of austenite and ferrite structure may optionally be chosen. In some aspects, a protective layer is 100% austenite, optionally 90% austenite or greater, optionally 80% austenite or greater, optionally 70% austenite or greater, optionally 60% austenite or greater, optionally 50% austenite or greater.
[0059] A protective layer metal alloy may include one or more other metals. Optionally, a protective alloy layer may include molybdenum. Mo, when present, may be provided at a weight percent of 0 to 5. Optionally, a protective layer metal alloy may include aluminum. When present Al may be provided at 0.01 wt % to 10 wt %. Al is optionally present at or less than 10 wt %, optionally at or less than 8 wt %, optionally at or less than 6 wt %.
[0060] As discussed above, some elements act as austenite stabilizers while others promote ferrite. Further, the extent of their influence also varies considerably. For example, N is almost 20 times more effective in stabilizing austenite compared to Mn. Similarly, Cr is almost two times more effective than Mo in stabilizing ferrite. Therefore, to predict the phases of the iron alloys of this disclosure, it is appropriate to use a nitrogen equivalent as a predictor of austenite/ferrite composition in a N alloyed protective layer as presented in this disclosure. For iron alloys primarily containing Mn, Cr, and N alloying elements, the N and Cr equivalents can be expressed as: N_eq=10 (wt. % N)+0.25 (wt. % Mn)0.02(wt. % Mn).sup.2+0.00035(wt. % Mn).sup.3 and Cr_eq=wt. % Cr, respectively. Note that should any other elements be present in appreciable amount, whether austenite stabilizer or ferrite stabilizer, N_eq and Cr_eq is modified appropriately. Further, there is a lot of controversy regarding weight factors for each element and often they are empirically determined from experiments. But, there is a general agreement that N and C are the two most impactful austenite stabilizers. Since addition of C beyond 0.1 wt % is detrimental to the toughness, primarily the influence of N and Mn is considered here for exemplary illustration of alloy compositions.
[0061] Accordingly, the alloy composition impact on phase stability is illustrated in
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 N Mn Cr N_eq Cr_eq Alloy # (wt %) (wt %) (wt %) (wt %) (wt %) Phase 1 0.5 15 13 5.27 13 2 0.5 20 13 4.6 13 3 0.5 30 13 3.65 13 4 0.5 20 20 4.6 20 + 5 0.7 20 20 6.6 20
[0062] An exemplary alloy containing 15 wt % Cr, 25 wt % Mn and 0.7 wt % N and the remainder Fe would form an austenite phase which is preferred in many applications, especially when the substrate is a FCC metal. In some aspects, a N alloy is or includes 13-14 wt. % Cr, 20-26 wt. % Mn, and 0.4-0.6 wt. % N with the remainder being Fe.
[0063] Referring to
[0064] Step 52 can be achieved either manually by placing the substrate in a desired manner or via an automated system that disposes the substrate in accordance to a predetermined program. The latter approach may be used, for example, in industrial implementation. The surface quality of the precursor N alloy plays an important role in the joining process of step 54, if used. The surface preparation of the substrate is less important. As a way of illustration, two types of bonding can occur between the substrate and the protective layer. In the case of nitriding, wherein the protective layer grows on the substrate through a diffusion process, the bonding is generally termed as metallurgical in the art. Similarly, fusion joining as is achieved in this disclosure also establishes a metallurgical bonding. On the other hand, deposition processes such as plasma spraying establish a mechanical adhesion, wherein extensive surface preparation such as grit blasting or surface grooving is necessary for good adhesion. In general, the metallurgical bonding used by the present processes is preferred and exhibits superior thermomechanical and corrosion properties especially under cyclic loading, and is preferred in step 54 of method 50. Various joining methods to achieve metallurgical bonding will be illustrated below in this disclosure. While a clean and grease free surface is preferred, no special surface treatment is necessary.
[0065] In step 53, a strip precursor is optionally deposed onto the substrate of step 52, followed by step 54, wherein the said precursor is joined to the substrate and during the joining process, the strip precursor remains substantially solid ensuring the retention of the dissolved nitrogen in the protective layer. The joining process is optionally a linear friction welding process, wherein the interfacial layer softens into a plastic state due to oscillating linear motion between the precursor and the substrate and upon cooling forms a metallurgically bonded joint. Optionally the strip precursor comprises of preformed anchors and is deposed onto a molten alloy, the latter upon solidification forms the substrate. The embedment of the anchors into the solid substrate ensures the adhesion to the substrate. The molten alloy temperature is preferably below the melting point of the precursor alloy so that the precursor doesn't appreciably melt and lose its dissolved nitrogen, although surface interaction may promote metallurgical bonding. Exemplary illustrations of strip joining process is provided below in this disclosure.
[0066] Optionally, step 53 and step 54 are conducted simultaneously, wherein the solid powder precursor is deposed onto the substrate at high velocity which upon impact forms a metallurgical bonding with the substrate and thus forms the alloy layer. This can be suitably achieved by a supersonic nozzle, wherein the solid powder precursor is injected into a high velocity gas jet which accelerates the powders. The gas is optionally heated to increase the precursor powder temperature, but keep it below the melting point. Additional energy may optionally be provided onto the powder or both the substrate and the powder in steps 53 and 54. However, the precursor and the layer formed from it optionally remain substantially below the melting point. An exemplary energy source is optionally a laser, an electron beam, a plasma or infrared source, while a laser beam may be used in some aspects due to the flexibility and simplicity afforded by it. The deposition nozzle moves according to CAD data or tool path generated by a control system to build the nitrogen alloy protective layer over the substrate. Optionally, the nozzle movement can be done manually.
[0067] Method 50, according to some aspects, may further include a logic gate to determine the need for additional layers in step 55. If an additional layer is required, steps 53-54 are repeated. When the powder precursor is used, only thin layers (micrometers) may be built in one pass and hence the process is repeated multiple times to build an appreciable thickness of the protective alloy layer. If the desired layer thickness has been fabricated, the composite object is cooled to ambient temperature in step 56 and method 50 concludes in step 57 and the object is removed. The steps in method 50 are not necessarily always discrete. In some aspects, there are one or more overlaps between one or more discrete steps leading to a continuous fabrication process. Further, some steps may be omitted.
[0068] An exemplary fabrication method 60 operating according to the teachings of the present disclosure is illustrated in
with being the amplitude, f the frequency, P the pressure and A the interface area. From this relationship it can be seen that the power input can be increased by increasing the frequency, amplitude or pressure. For example, to join the nitrogen alloy strip with 4025 mm area onto aluminum substrate, optionally the parameters can be; frequency: 30 Hz-60 Hz, amplitude: 2 to 3 mm, pressure: 80-150 MPa and time: 7-25 s.
[0069] Although method 60 can effectively fabricate the article with the nitrogen alloy protective layer, in this method both the N alloy strip and the substrate may be substantially flat such that intimate contact can be made along the interface. Further, for a large article the mechanical force required to make friction welding across a large area quickly goes up and becomes difficult to control. Obviously this limits the shape and size of the articles that can be fabricated. As such, an alternative manufacturing method 60 for an article is illustrated in
[0070] Referring to
[0071] Method 70 can fabricate the nitrogen alloy layer in various forms. As illustrated in
[0072] Referring to
[0073] Various aspects of the present disclosure are illustrated by the following non-limiting examples. The examples are for illustrative purposes and are not a limitation on any practice of the present invention. It will be understood that variations and modifications can be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention.
EXAMPLE
[0074] Alloy layers were fabricated by a cold spray process described in U.S. Pat. No. 9,481,933. The precursor powder utilized in these experiments had 0.7 wt. % N, 19 wt. % Mn, 15 wt. % Cr and rest iron with powder size ranging from 20-45 m and was processed according to the teachings of U.S. Patent Application No. 62/810,680. Both steel and cast iron substrates were utilized. For cold spray, the process gas was nitrogen at 500 psi and 600 C. and the target distance was 10 mm. The powder was fed at 10 g/min rate. The layer microstructure is shown in
REFERENCE LIST
[0075] U.S. Pat. No. 7,160,635 [0076] U.S. Pat. No. 6,623,846 [0077] U.S. Pat. No. 7,294,077 [0078] U.S. Pat. No. 8,920,881 [0079] U.S. Pat. No. 9,481,933 [0080] US Application Publication No: 2014/0096736 [0081] US Application Publication No: 2015/0118516 [0082] US Application Publication No: 2017/0167031
NON-PATENT REFERENCES
[0083] Mittemeijer, E. J. (2013), Fundamentals of Nitriding and Nitrocarburizing, ASM Handbook, Volume 4A, Steel Heat Treating Fundamentals and Processes, J. Dossett and G. E. Totten, editors. [0084] V. V. Berezovskaya, et al, TWIP-EFFECT IN NICKEL-FREE HIGH-NITROGEN AUSTENITIC CrMn STEELS, Metal Science and Heat Treatment, Vol. 57, Nos. 11-12, March, 2016. [0085] E. Yu. Kolpishon, et al., Possibilities of Reducing the Chromium and Manganese Contents in a Nitrogen-Bearing Austenitic Steel, Russian Metallurgy (Metally), Vol. 2007, No. 8, pp. 728-732
[0086] Various modifications of the present invention, in addition to those shown and described herein, will be apparent to those skilled in the art of the above description. Such modifications are also intended to fall within the scope of the appended claims.
[0087] It is appreciated that all reagents are obtainable by sources known in the art unless otherwise specified.
[0088] Patents, publications, and applications mentioned in the specification are indicative of the levels of those skilled in the art to which the invention pertains. These patents, publications, and applications are incorporated herein by reference to the same extent as if each individual patent, publication, or application was specifically and individually incorporated herein by reference.
[0089] The foregoing description is illustrative of particular embodiments of the invention, but is not meant to be a limitation upon the practice thereof.