Assessment of Cooling Performance of High Temperature Quenchants for Industrial Heat Treatment
Date
2019
Authors
K. M, Pranesh Rao
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
National Institute of Technology Karnataka, Surathkal
Abstract
The present work provides a significant insight into cooling performance of molten salt
mixtures and hot oils used for austempering/martempering of steel parts.
The analysis is based on the assessment of spatially dependent transient heat flux at the
metal-quenchant interface using an inverse heat transfer method. The results were used
for quantification of the cooling performance as well as cooling uniformity of quench
baths maintained at different bath temperatures. Cooling performance of hot oil and
molten NaNO2 eutectic mixture at bath temperature of 150°C was studied. The heat
extraction mechanism was completely different, and the study revealed that the molten
salt offered higher cooling rate and more uniform cooling as compared to hot oil quench
media. For molten KNO3- NaNO3 eutectic mixture, a linear regression model to predict
critical average heat flux parameters during cooling of standard Inconel probe at a given
bath temperature was developed. In the case of molten NaNO3-KNO3 mixtures, a contour
map was drawn to predict average peak heat flux, heat flux at the start of convective
cooling stage and corresponding average surface temperatures with varying quench
bath composition and temperature. The bath composition significantly affected their
cooling performance and uniformity of cooling. The increase in NaNO3 content of the
salt bath enhanced its cooling performance and cooling uniformity. A mechanism of
boiling heat transfer based on endothermic thermochemical decomposition of the salt
is proposed.
A low melting KNO3-LiNO3-NaNO3 eutectic salt mixture and neem oil were
investigated to assess their suitability as high temperature quench media. Inconel probe
experiments involving this salt mixture suggested lower hardness. However, the
wettability study on steel indicated an extended boiling stage yielding hardness
comparable to that obtained with conventional molten salt mixtures. The cooling
performance and uniformity of neem oil was higher compared to hot oils. A simulation
study to model the effect of diameter, heat transfer coefficient, bath temperature and
residence time on hardness distribution during martempering of AISI 4140 steel
cylinders was conducted. An artificial neural network model to predict hardness
distribution in AISI 4140 cylinder was proposed.
Description
Keywords
Department of Metallurgical and Materials Engineering, Quench media, Inverse method, heat flux, uniformity, molten salt, hot oil