Development oTungsten Inert Gas and Microwave Treated Claddings In Improving Resistance to Wear at Elevated Temperatures
Date
2022
Authors
Suresh, Gudala
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The remanufacturing of high-value engineering components is becoming a
mainstream practice to reduce the environmental impact. The components such as
cams, gears, and bearings rely on the integrity of their interacting surfaces where
loads act over a small surface area, leading to high contact stresses, which may further
influence the grater region of the surface. Especially at elevated temperatures,
components used in the aero engine, gas and steam turbines, and bearings lose their
efficiency due to the deterioration of material properties. The components used in
such adverse conditions are important to adapt suitable surface modification
techniques to increase the service life.
Cladding emerged as an effective surface modification technology and is widely
used in many industries to protect the components against surface failures like wear,
corrosion, and oxidation. Among many materials, titanium has numerous applications
in a rocket motor, structural forgings and fasteners, pressure vessels, chemical gas
pumps, marine components, and steam turbine blades, etc. Even though titanium alloy
has a high specific strength and elevated melting temperature, it has low hardness and
poor wear resistance. Hence the improvement of surface mechanical properties of
titanium is essential to extend its application in an abrasive environment. The present
work explores the TIG cladding technique and microwave hybrid heating (MHH)
technique to enhance the surface properties of the titanium 31 alloy against wear at
elevated temperatures.
Commercially available materials such as NiCrSiB/WC, Ag, BaF2, MoS2, and hBN
are used as the cladding powders. Four types of composite coatings were prepared,
namely NiCrSiB/WC/Ag/BaF2, NiCrSiB/WC/Ag/hBN, NiCrSiB/WC/MoS2/BaF2, and
NiCrSiB/WC/MoS2/hBN, and deposited on Titanium 31 grade alloy substrate by TIG
cladding and microwave cladding techniques at optimized parameters. The claddings
were characterized using Scanning Electron Microscope (SEM), Energy Dispersive
Spectroscopy (EDS), Electron Backscatter Diffraction (EBSD), and X-ray diffraction
(XRD). Further, claddings are characterized for microstructural and mechanical
properties (porosity, dilution, microhardness, fracture toughness) and evaluated their
potential for high temperature environments in sliding wear conditions. At optimized
TIG and microwave hybrid techniques, less porosity (< 2%) and dilution were
obtained.
The influence of solid lubricants, namely Ag, BaF2, MoS2, and hBN, on
NiCrSiB/WC claddings is dealt with for tribological performance at elevated
temperatures. Dry sliding wear behavior of titanium 31 substrate,
NiCrSiB/WC/Ag/BaF2, NiCrSiB/WC/Ag/hBN, NiCrSiB/WC/MoS2/BaF2, and
NiCrSiB/WC/MoS2/hBN is evaluated using high temperature pin on disc tribometer.
All four coatings showed a synergistic lubrication effect at low and high temperatures.
Due to the reduction of surface contact against the alumina counter body, claddings
displayed a lower friction coefficient and wear rate than the substrate. Based on the
weight loss data, the relative wear resistance of the both TIG and microwave
claddings under dry sliding conditions is arranged in the following sequence:
NiCrSiB/WC/Ag/BaF2 > NiCrSiB/WC/Ag/hBN > NiCrSiB/WC/MoS2/hBN >
NiCrSiB/WC/MoS2/BaF2. The combined lubricating effect of Ag and BaF2 solid
lubricants incorporated in the claddings was adequate to reduce material loss than
other composite claddings. Comparatively, TIG processed clads showed lower wear
rates than the MHH clads at all wear testing conditions. Developed claddings in the
present study exhibit higher temperature resistance than titanium 31 alloy substrate
making them suitable for components subjected to elevated temperature service
conditions.
Description
Keywords
Microwave Hybrid heating, Nickel-based alloy, Solid lubricants, Microstructure