MICROWAVE HEATING OF BORON STEEL BLANKS PRIOR TO THE HOT-STAMPING PROCESS
20190320508 ยท 2019-10-17
Inventors
Cpc classification
B21D22/022
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C21D1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C21D1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method of heating a steel blank using a microwave heating furnace system for the hot stamping process includes providing a steel blank having a thickness ranging from 1 mm to 1.8 mm, pre-heating the streel blank to an initial temperature in a pre-heat chamber of the microwave heating furnace system, and directly heating the steel blank using microwave energy in a main heating zone of the microwave heating furnace system from the initial temperature to a temperature greater than 850 C. in less than 240 seconds.
Claims
1. A method of heating a metal blank using a microwave heating furnace system for a hot stamping process, the method comprising the steps of: providing a metal blank having a thickness ranging from 1 mm to 1.8 mm; pre-heating the metal blank to an initial temperature in a pre-heat chamber of the microwave heating furnace system; and directly heating the metal blank using microwave energy in a main heating chamber of the microwave heating furnace system from the initial temperature to a temperature greater than 850 C. in less than 240 seconds.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein the main heating zone includes two or more heating sub-zones, each sub-zone configured to increase a temperature range.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the steel blank is a boron steel blank.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the initial temperature is between 350 C. and 400 C.
5. The method according to claim 1, wherein the pre-heat chamber has a height greater than its width.
6. The method according to claim 1, wherein the pre-heating is done by microwave energy.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the pre-heating is done by thermal heating.
8. The method according to claim 3, wherein the boron steel blank is being heated using 100% microwave heating.
9. The method according to claim 3, wherein the heating energy for heating the boron steel blank is partially microwave energy.
10. The method according to claim 1, wherein the microwave heating furnace system further comprises a conveyor system for transporting the steel blank and silicon carbide nanocoated pins used to hold the steel blank in place on the conveyor system.
11. The method according to claim 1, wherein the microwave heating furnace system further comprises a conveyor system for transporting the metal blank and silicon carbide nanocoated hooks or clips used to hold the metal blank in place on the conveyor system.
12. The microwave heating furnace system according to claim 1, wherein the pre-heat and the main heating zone each comprise a steel mesh curtain or door to shield the microwave both into and out of the pre-heat chamber.
13. A microwave heating furnace system for heating metal blanks for hot stamping, comprising: an incoming feed for feeding a metal blank into the furnace system; a pre-heat chamber for heating the metal blank to an initial temperature; a main heating zone adjacent to the pre-heat chamber having at least one heating sub-zone, the main heating zone configured to heat the metal blank from the pre-heat chamber to a second temperature in a processing time between 180 and 240 seconds; an outgoing section for transferring the metal blank to a subsequent hot stamping process; and a continuous conveyor system from the incoming feed through the pre-heat chamber and the main heating zone to the outgoing section for transferring the metal blank to the hot-stamping process.
14. The microwave heating furnace system according to claim 13, wherein the metal blank is a boron steel blank.
15. The microwave heating furnace system according to claim 14, wherein the boron steel blank has a thickness ranging from 1 mm to 1.8 mm.
16. The microwave heating furnace system according to claim 13, wherein the initial temperature is between 350 C. and 400 C.
17. The microwave heating furnace system according to claim 13, wherein the second temperature is greater than 850 C.
18. The microwave heating furnace system according to claim 13, wherein the main heating zone includes two or more heating sub-zones, the heating sub-zones configured to heat the metal blank from the pre-heating chamber to graded temperatures.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0028]
[0029] The microwave furnace system includes a main heating zone C and an area G underneath the main heating zone C for the magnetrons, fans and other necessary components of a microwave furnace. The main heating zone C comprises multiple sub-zones built into the microwave furnace. In
[0030] The steel blanks heated may be made from boron steel. The boron steel may be aluminized. The microwave furnace system 100 may also be used to heat magnesium boron steel or carbon steel and other thin metal sheets.
[0031] The microwave furnace system 100 includes an entrance IN where the steel blanks pass through into a pre-heat chamber B and an exit OUT where the steel blanks leave the microwave furnace system 100.
[0032] The system uses a conveyor system F that starts from the entrance IN, makes a U-shape along the sides and the bottom of the pre-heat chamber B, and up into the main heating zone C where it continues to run though the length of the main heating zone C and until the exit OUT of the microwave furnace system.
[0033] A robotic arm (not shown) places the boron steel blanks at the entrance to the pre-heat chamber B, then the boron steel blanks are moved onto a conveyor system F. The direction of the arrows denotes the moving direction of the steel blank on the conveyor system from the entrance IN through the pre-heat chamber B and through the main heating zone C. Upon exiting the microwave furnace system 100, the steel blanks will be picked up by a robotic arm (not shown) that transfers the red-hot blanks from the microwave furnace system 100 directly to the Hot-Stamping Process (HSP).
[0034]
[0035] Similarly, when the boron steel blank leaves the pre-heat chamber B, the door SD3 opens. Once the boron steel blank is on the other side of the door SD3, the door SD3 closes, and the door SD4 opens to allow the boron steel blank to continue through the main heating zone C and on through the exit OUT.
[0036] The height H and width W of the pre-heat chamber B is determined by the total surface area of the boron steel blanks to be heated. The pre-heat chamber B is designed to accommodate increases in the production rate of the Hot-Stamping Process HSP as it has the possibility of multiple pre-heat zones which can be inter-changed with the main heating zone depending on the production demand. In addition, having additional pre-heat zones ensures that any maintenance downtime is eliminated so that 24/7 production can continue uninterrupted by just replacing one pre-heat chamber for another. The multiple pre-heat chambers can be brought into play as, when and if required. A quality inspection process is also incorporated with the multiple station setup.
[0037] The pre-heat chamber B is made of stainless steel and is concave in shape to maximize the efficiency of the microwaves and provide uniformity of heating temperature.
[0038] The conveyor system F is made of steel wire-mesh which can resist temperatures up to 1200 C. As the boron steel blanks at room temperature approach the steel door SD1, silicon carbide hooks hold the blanks in place through all the heating zones, and out of the furnace to be picked up robotically and removed which are red-hot for the HSP.
[0039] The boron steel blanks which have a thickness between 1 mm and 1.8 mm are pre-cut by laser, to a particular shape and are fed into the microwave furnace system 100 by the conveyor system F. The conveyor system can be a steel wire-mesh conveyor or other suitable material that reflects microwaves.
[0040] The microwave furnace system can be a 100% microwave heating system or a hybrid system that combines thermal heating via susceptors with microwave heating as shown in
[0041] The use of microwave in this application has many advantages compared to a conventional furnace. With a conventional furnace the energy is absorbed on the surface of the metal and only when sufficient heat has been created can the heat penetrate the whole metal blank by energy transfer. This process is time-consuming. But with a microwave furnace, the microwaves are absorbed by the whole metal blank as volumetric heating that is converted to energy resulting in rapid heating creating a uniform microwave field. A Microwave furnace is heating the steel blank directly by energy conversion. Microwave heating is therefore highly energy efficient thus reducing all harmful emissions.
[0042] Since microwaves can couple directly with a material causing it to heat up, the temperature in the material can be precisely controlled by regulating the supplied power. Heating takes place instantaneously when microwave energy is supplied and stops as soon as it is switched off, allowing for fast, efficient and accurate control.
[0043] Rapid heating also shortens the length of the furnace system by up to 70% and reduces the energy costs by up to 50%. The product throughput rate can be increased with inter-changeable pre-heat chambers depending upon the demand of the Hot-Stamping Process. For example, the microwave furnace system of the present invention may have a footprint length of only 5-8 meters.
[0044]
[0045] In a 100% microwave heating system, the blanks are heated directly by microwave energy generated in the microwave heating chamber. The term directly is defined herein as heating the metal blanks directly with microwave energy without any intermediate medium absorbing the microwave. In other words, the microwave interacts with the metal blanks directly.
[0046] In some embodiments, the ambient of the main heating chamber may be pre-heated using susceptors to a pre-determined temperature to minimize the heat loss from the blanks being heated.
[0047] Hybrid microwave heating involves the use of two types of energy: microwave energy and thermal energy, as illustrated in
[0048] In a hybrid system, susceptor materials with excellent microwave absorption and heat-conducting properties such as silicon carbide (SiC) may be used throughout the system. In this case, the steel blanks are heated partly by direct microwave energy and partly by the thermal energy radiated from the susceptor materials. In the pre-heat chamber, the blank may be pre-heated by either microwave energy or by conventional or thermal heating. Pre-heating promotes a more uniform temperature.
[0049] The microwave furnace systems according to the embodiments of the present invention are closed systems with minimal heat loss. The main heating zone C might have a rectangular or cylindrical shape.
[0050] Example Experiment
[0051] Boron steel is used which may contain carbon of about 0.25-0.37 wt % C, 1.4% max manganese (Mn) and 0.5% max boron (B) as elements for improving heat treatment performance. The austenitizing temperature of boron steel is between 880-930 C. 900 C. is preferred. The microwave setup was heated to 920 C. for 43 minutes. The sample was put into the setup at 920 C. The setup with the sample inside was heated for 2-4 minutes. After microwave heating, the sample was taken out and water quenching was performed cooling >30 C.
[0052] As this is a continuous system each blank, or a combination of blanks of the same shape pass through the pre-heating furnace which can reach up to 854 C. in 2 minutes; up to 901 C. in 3 minutes, and 1,000 C. in 4 minutes.
[0053] Microwave heating can be one step heating where the sheets can be inserted into microwave furnace at room temperature. Samples did not show any warping. Microwave treatment can cut down the processing time from 240 s to 120-180 s time range, a maximum reduction by 50%. This is achieved at a lab scale and can be translated to industrial scale with this invention. As shown in the table of
[0054] A microwave heating or hybrid heating system improves the material properties as the material is heated from the inside out by microwave energy, as shown in
[0055] It will be clear to those of skill in the art, the embodiments of the present invention illustrated and discussed herein may be altered in various ways without departing from the scope or teaching of the present invention. Also, elements and aspects of one embodiment may be combined with elements and aspects of another embodiment. It is the following claims, including all equivalents, which define the scope of the invention.