Effect Of Cryogenic Treatment On Low Alloy Steels
Date
2023
Authors
Sondar, Pavankumar R
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute Of Technology Karnataka Surathkal
Abstract
Cryogenic Treatment, as an additional step to hardening and tempering heat-treatments, has proven
to be beneficial in improving mechanical properties of various steel grades. To transform retained
austenite into martensite in structural steels, cryogenic treatment is conventionally performed
immediately after quench-hardening and prior to the tempering treatment. Contrary to this well-
established conventional practice, some industrial heat-treaters often carryout the cryogenic
treatment as the last step after the tempering treatment without comprehensively knowing the
consequence of the same on the properties and performance of steel components. While published
literature on the cryogenic treatment performed after the tempering of steels is sparse, a direct
comparison of the effects of conventional and unconventional cryogenic treatments on common
structural steels is almost nonexistent. This work presents a comparative analysis of deep
cryogenic treatment performed on five commercial steel grades, EN8, EN18, EN47, EN24 and
EN45, and highlights the effect of cryogenic exposure carried out before and after the tempering
step separately. Through detailed experimentation, testing and characterization involving, several
heat treatment cycles, tensile test, impact test, hardness test, wear test, fractography,
metallography, and microstructural analysis, this work suggests that the cryogenic treatment
carried out as an intermediate step between quenching and tempering yields much better
mechanical properties than that carried out after tempering.
The results of the experimental work in this study shows that, the unconventional cryogenic
treatment, that is carried out after the tempering step, has almost no influence on hardness and
strength of EN8, EN18 and EN47 steels and very little influence on EN24 and EN45 steels.
However, the conventional cryogenic treatment that is carried out prior to the tempering step shows
significant improvements in the hardness (1-3 HRC), yield strength (4-17.4%) and tensile strength
(3.9-16.8%) in the above steel grades in general. In particular, this work shows that the
conventional cryogenic treatment is very effective in improving the overall mechanical properties
of EN45 and EN24 grades including hardness (2-3 HRC), tensile strength (13.2- 16.8%), resilience
(up to 24%), and wear resistance (36-42%). Thus, this thesis conclusively demonstrates and
cautions commercial heat-treaters that the conventional cryogenic treatment that is applied as an
intermediate step between hardening and tempering is much more effective than the
unconventional industrial practice.
Description
Keywords
Quenching, Tempering, Cryogenic Treatment, Martensite