Background of the Invention
[0001] This application is a Continuation-in-Part of U.S. Application Serial Number 07/211,197,
filed June 29, 1988, which is a Continuation-In-Part of U.S. Application Serial Number
07/167,000 filed March 11, 1988.
[0002] The present invention relates to cemented carbide bodies and particularly to cemented
carbide bodies that have been treated with boron.
[0003] The cutting and drilling industries continue to place increased demands on cutting
implements to hold a sharper edge and to last longer. Ordinary cemented carbide-tipped
cutting elements consist of a mixture of tungsten carbide (WC) as a hard metal phase
and Cobalt (Co) as a binder phase. WC and Co powders are sintered to create a WC/Co
cemented carbide body. As is known in the art, many modifications have been made to
the simple WC/Co body to enhance its properties for various applications. In general,
there is a trade-off between brittleness and hardness. If a harder metal is chosen
to cut better and hold a sharper edge, it tends to be more brittle and therefore to
suffer brittle failure sooner than a material that is not as hard.
[0004] To avoid the problem of increased brittleness while still improving hardness, some
people have provided a boron addition as a thin surface coating or layer onto the
carbide body. The surface coating or layer may be applied by thermal spraying, physical
vapor deposition, chemical vapor deposition, and other known methods. It is also known
to diffuse boron into the surface of the cemented carbide body to form a thin, hard
layer.
[0005] A major problem inherent in all of the attempts to provide a boride coating or layer
on WC/Co or other carbide bodies is that, once the thin surface has been worn away,
the hardness and other improved features are lost and the tool can no longer be used
satisfactorily. If coated saw tips are first brazed onto a saw blade and then sharpened
in place, the coating or surface layer may be lost due to the initial sharpening.
It would almost certainly be lost on subsequent sharpening. Other problems include
the fact that the layer has different thermal expansion and other properties than
the substrate and therefore may tend to separate from the substrate during use. Brazing
of pieces with layers or coatings is also difficult.
Summary of the Invention
[0006] The present invention provides a cemented carbide which provides a better cutting
edge with longer wear characteristics than the prior art without encountering the
problems involved with coatings and layers or the problems of increased brittleness
encountered in previous attempts.
[0007] Surprisingly, the present invention permits the addition of boron to a great depth
in the WC/Co or other cemented carbide body without increasing brittleness.
[0008] In fact, most of the standard measures, such as hardness, coercive force, and so
forth exhibit little change when boron is added in accordance with the present invention,
leading one to believe that they must not cause much improvement over the standard
WC/Co body. However, the actual field performance of WC/Co or other carbide bodies
made according to the present invention has been substantially improved over the performance
of conventional WC/Co implements. It is suspected that the improvement is due to several
factors.
[0009] Recent analysis of the present invention indicates that the boron causes a third
phase to be formed. This third phase appears to act as another binder phase, which
includes Cobalt, small amounts of Boron and Carbon, and substantially more Tungsten
than appears in the standard binder phase. It is suspected that this third phase causes
an improvement primarily by increasing the fracture toughness of the material, thereby
making it more difficult for a crack to propagate through the material to cause failure.
Corrosion resistance also appears to be improved. It is also thought that the improved
microstructure may be able to be sharpened to a finer edger than in the prior art.
[0010] Accordingly, it is an object of the present invention to provide an improved boron-enhanced
carbide implement suitable for cutting, drilling, grinding, and so forth.
[0011] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a method to incorporate
boron deep into the structure of a WC/Co or other cemented carbide body.
[0012] It is a further object of the present invention to provide an improved cemented carbide
body that may be sharpened, resharpened, and reused without losing its original properties.
[0013] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a cemented carbide body
with improved corrosion resistance.
[0014] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a cemented carbide body
with improved fracture toughness.
[0015] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a cemented carbide body
with a carbide phase, a binder phase, and a third phase including a binder material
and boron.
[0016] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a cemented carbide body
with a carbide phase, including a carbide former and carbon, a binder phase, and a
third phase including a binder material, boron, and at least 40% by weight of a carbide
former.
[0017] It is a further object of the present invention to provide a cemented carbide body
with a carbide phase, a binder phase, and a third phase which improves toughness without
adversely affecting hardness.
[0018] These and other improvements will be better understood upon reading the description
which follows.
Brief Description of the Drawings
[0019]
Figure 1 is a photomicrograph at 200X of a polished section of an untreated (control)
extra-fine grain (micrograin) 94.5% WC/5.5% cobalt body which was sintered in a disassociated
ammonia atmosphere, the polished section of which has been treated with a standard
acid etchant;
Figure 2 is a photomicrograph at 100X of an extra-fine grain 94.5% WC/5.5% cobalt
body made according to the present invention, where the body was sintered in a disassociated
ammonia atmosphere surrounded by sintering sand containing 2.5% by weight of boron
nitride (BN), the polished section of which has been treated with an acid etchant;
Figure 3 is a photomicrograph at 200X of a medium grain untreated sample with 87%
WC/13% Co which was sintered in a disassociated ammonia atmosphere, the polished section
of which has been treated with an acid etchant.
Figure 4 is a photomicrograph at 100X of a medium grain sample with 87% WC/13% Co
which was sintered in a disassociated ammonia atmosphere surrounded by sintering sand
containing 2.5% by weight of boron nitride, the polished section of which has been
treated with an acid etchant.
Figure 5 is a photomicrograph at 1250X of a medium grain sample with 87% WC/13% Co
which was sintered in a disassociated ammonia atmosphere surrounded by sintering sand
containing 0.5% boron nitride, the polished section of which has been treated with
an acid etchant.
Figure 6 is a plot of net watts versus lineal feet cut for saw blades cutting 0.75
inch thick medium density particle board at 5 feet per minute for untreated blades,
blades with Borofuse processed tips, and blades with tips treated in accordance with
the present invention.
Figure 7 is a plot of apparent fracture toughness (Ka) versus %BN in the sintering
sand for two grades of material.
Figure 8 is a plot of the eddy current signal versus %BN in the sintering sand for
Vermont American's 2M12 grade samples.
Figure 9 is a plot of the eddy current signal versus %BN in the sand for Vermont American's
OM2 grade samples.
Figure 10 is a photograph at a magnification of 2,040 times of a medium grain sample
with 91% WC/9% Co which was sintered in sintering sand containing 1% by weight of
boron nitride, the polished section of which has been treated with an acid etchant.
Figure 11 is a photograph at a magnification of 2,040 times of a polished section
of the sample of Figure 10 without etching.
Detailed Description of the Preferred Embodiments
[0020] The cemented carbide bodies of the present invention are made in accordance with
the general teachings of the art in many respects. Generally, cemented carbide bodies
are made according to processes in which powders of a carbide material, for example
tungsten carbide (WC), and a binder material, for example cobalt (Co), are milled
to carefully controlled composition and particle sizes (called "grades") and then
dried, for example by spray-drying. The dried grade carbide/binder (for example WC/Co)
powder is then pressed in the presence of a lubricant to a selected shape.
[0021] If sintering is to be done in a continuous stoking furnace, the shapes are put into
graphite boats which have been filled with Al₂O₃ grains or other sintering sand. The
shapes are surrounded by the sand and are usually put into the boat in layers. First
a layer of sand on the surface of the graphite boat, then a layer of the shapes, then
more sand, then another layer of shapes, and so forth, until several layers are positioned
in the graphite boat. The sand prevents the pieces from sintering together or chipping
and serves as an insulator as the boat moves through the furnace into different temperature
zones to facilitate liquid phase sintering. In some embodiments of the present invention,
a boron-containing powder is mixed into the sand before the shapes are immersed in
the sand.
[0022] I have used boron nitride, boron powder, boron carbide, and boron oxide as boron-containing
powders and believe that other boron-containing powders would also work. When boron
nitride (BN) is used as an additive to the sintering sand, which is my preference,
a boron nitride product available from Standard oil Engineered Materials Company,
Semiconductor Products Division, 2050 Cory Road, Special Fibers Building, Sanborn,
NY 14132 U.S., and sold under the trademark COMBAT®, Boron Nitride powder CAS number
10043-11-5 has been found to be satisfactory. This is a BN powder having a screen
size specification of minus 325 mesh. The concentrations of BN used herein are for
this size of powder. Basic chemical and physical principles suggest that if powders
of different particle size and therefore different surface areas are used, the concentrations
should be adjusted to provide the same effective surface area. Alternative boron-containing
materials which should work in the present invention are: AlB₂, AlB₁₂, CrB, CrB₂,
Cr₃B₅, MoB, NbB₆, NbB₂, B₃Si, B₄Si, B₆Si, TaB, TaB₂, TiB₂, WB, W₂B₂, W₂B, VB₂, and
ZrB₂. Since it is probable that the transport of boron into the cemented carbide is
by gas, other sources of boron could be boron-containing organo-metallics which have
relatively low vaporization temperatures, such as B₃N₃H₆, B₁₀H₁₄, B₂H₇N, B₁₀H₁₀C₂H₂,
B(OCH₃)₃, C₆H₅BCl₂, C₅H₅NBH₃, B(C₂H₅)₃, and so forth. Also, other inorganic compounds
such as CoB, FeB, MnB, NiB and combinations of boron with the halogens hold promise
of successful use, but we have not tried them.
[0023] Then, the graphite boats containing sand and shapes pass into the sintering furnace
or furnaces, are heated or pre-sintered to drive off the lubricant, and are then heated
to the sintering temperature.
[0024] If sintering is to be done in a vacuum furnace, the shapes are put onto trays. In
order to prevent the shapes from sticking to the trays and to prevent transfer of
carbon between the graphite tray and the shape, some type of paint or coating is usually
applied to the tray before putting on the shapes. The coating is then dried, preferably
in a vacuum drying oven. In the present invention, some form of boron is added to
the paint or coating. Moderately successful to completely successful tests have been
conducted with paint made by mixing boron nitride powder with water and/or alcohol
to a paint consistency and simply painting it on the tray. In those tests, the boron
entered the shape but not as homogeneously as with the sand. It is thought that a
more even distribution of boron would be obtained if the whole shape were painted.
Other forms of boron-containing powders and other solvents or vehicles likely could
be used. Then the tray is inserted into the furnace, is raised to a pre-sintering
temperature to drive off the lubricant, and is then raised to a sintering temperature.
[0025] Re-sintering of already-sintered bodies may also be conducted in the presence of
the boron-containing sand or paint, and the boron will disperse deeply into the body
in the same manner. Of course, in this case, pre-sintering is not necessary, because
there is no lubricant to drive off.
[0026] When the shapes are sintered in the boron-doped sand or paint, some form of boron
diffuses or migrates into the shape or body and is dispersed fairly homogeneously
for a depth of at least 0.125 inches into the microstructure of the sintered body.
Preliminary tests of some thicker bodies, 0.5 inches in thickness, indicate that some
gradient of boron is present, with concentrations being greater toward the surface
than toward the center. It is believed that, by controlling the amount of boron-containing
material in the environment and by controlling the time and temperature of the sintering
process, or even re-sintering, it is possible to create a body with a relatively homogeneous
dispersion of boron or a variety of desired gradients. Also, it appears possible to
re-sinter a body treated according to the present invention--in a controlled atmosphere
with no boron-containing material present during such re-sintering--to achieve the
desired gradient or homogeneity. However, in no case when the present invention is
followed is a surface layer or coating formed. The surface layers formed in the various
known coating processes are on the order of 0.001 inches thick, so there is a difference
of at least two orders of magnitude between the thickness of a coating and the depth
of substantially homogeneous boron dispersion in the present invention.
[0027] Surprisingly, the characteristics of the resulting sintered body do not appear to
change very much relative to those of identical sintered bodies which are sintered
without the presence of boron. Hardness, transverse rupture strength, coercive force,
and so forth, are essentially the same. Fracture toughness improves over its value
in an otherwise identical body without boron. Resistance to corrosion also appears
to improve. And, as test results which will be described below indicate, saw blades
with tips made in accordance with the present invention operate markedly better than
their counterparts without boron.
[0028] In viewing the microstructure of carbide bodies made in accordance with the present
invention, several features are of interest:
[0029] First, the presence of the boron seems to remove free carbon. When a batch of bodies
previously sintered without boron is re-sintered in accordance with the present invention,
porosity due to free carbon is greatly reduced or eliminated.
[0030] Second, when bodies which have been sintered in accordance with the present invention
are etched with Murakami's reagent, they exhibit a rapid etch phase, which etches
in a manner similar to a defect known as "eta phase", but which is much finer than
a similar "eta phase" configuration and is generally found in swirls or feathers
homogeneously throughout the body. Also unlike bodies with "eta phase", the bodies
of the present invention do not show an increase in brittleness over bodies without
the rapid etch phase. An analysis of the carbide bodies, which will be described in
some detail later, indicates that boron is present in the feathery structures.
[0031] Third, the photos of Figures 10 and 11, which are at a higher magnification than
the other photos, indicate that the swirls or feathers are actually a third phase,
the average dimensions of which are larger than the average dimensions of the standard
binder phase. This third phase fills up the spaces between tungsten carbide particles
as a binder does. In Figure 11, it can be seen that the tungsten carbide particles
generally have straight sides and appear cubic, boxy, or angular. However, in the
region of the third phase, the tungsten carbide particles are more rounded, and some
have both shrunk in size and become rounded. It appears that the tungsten carbide
particles are somehow reacting so that part of the material from the particles is
lost from the particles and becomes part of the third phase. An analysis of these
samples indicates that, indeed, a substantial amount of tungsten is present in the
third phase. Additionally, analysis shows that boron is present in this phase, as
are carbon and cobalt.
[0032] Fourth, in some cases, as will be described below, the microstructure after etching
shows white spots, the content of which is not known.
[0033] The present invention has been tested in several variations on several different
carbide bodies. Figures 1-5 and 10-11 show the microstructures resulting from some
of the tests.
[0034] In order to view the microstructure in Figures 1-5, the specimens are prepared in
a standard manner. Typically, the specimen is mounted in a thermosetting epoxy resin.
The sintered specimen is rough ground on a 220-mesh diamond-embedded wheel using
water coolant. The specimen is then fine ground on a 45-micron diamond embedded wheel,
using water coolant. Then the specimen is coarse polished on a hard-plane cloth wheel,
such as nylon or silk, and then on a paper-based wheel. A charge of 15- or 30-micron
diamond paste may be applied to the wheel for polishing. The wheel may be lubricated
during polishing with oil or water or nothing, depending on the solubility of the
diamond carrier. Then the specimen is ultrasonically cleaned in a soapy solution.
Next, the specimen is medium polished on a hard-plane cloth wheel or a paper-based
wheel as above except with a charge of 6- or 9-micron diamond paste, and then the
specimen is ultrasonically cleaned in a soapy solution again. The specimen is then
fine polished on a short-nap cloth wheel (such as rayon) or on a paper-based wheel.
A charge of 1- or 3-micron diamond paste may be applied to the wheel for polishing,
again using a lubricant, and then the specimen is ultrasonically cleaned in a soapy
solution before processing. An additional polish may be done with a short-nap cloth
charged with 0.25- to 1-micron diamond. Polishing is done until a scratch-free mirror-finish
is obtained. Then, the sample is ultrasonically cleaned in a soapy solution, rinsed
with water, rinsed with alcohol, and dried.
[0035] Then, to observe the feathery structure, an etchant is applied. Two chemical etchants
have been found which reveal the structure. Murakami's Reagent, which is 10% KOH,
10% K₃Fe(Cn)6, and 80% H₂O is applied, left on for two minutes, rinsed with water,
then rinsed with alcohol and dried. Murakami's Reagent rapidly attacks the constituents
of the carbides treated in accordance with the present invention, typically in two-to-four
seconds. Alternatively, an acid etch prepared by mixing 30 ml H₂O + 10 ml HCl + 10
ml HNO₃ is applied to the surface until a delayed foaming reaction is completed. Then
the sample is rinsed first with water, then with alcohol, and then is dried. The acid
etchant is generally less aggressive than Murakami's Reagent but provides more microstructural
detail.
[0036] Another type of sample of the present invention has been prepared by mounting the
specimen in a resin, highly polishing the specimen to a point at which it is a bit
over-polished so that the harder elements are slightly raised above the softer elements,
and placing a conductive material in the resin. This type of sample can then be analyzed
using electron optics. A photograph of a sample prepared in this way and magnified
approximately 2,000 times is shown in Figure 11. Magnification of the polished, etched
and unetched bodies by approximately 2,000 times in a scanning electron microscope
as shown in Figures 10 and 11 reveals that the feathery structures are really a third
phase, which appears to function as an additional binder phase. An analysis of this
third phase will be described later.
[0037] As a general rule, the greater the amount of binder relative to carbide particles,
the softer and tougher the material. However, in this case, what appears to be happening
is that the additional phase serves to improve toughness without adversely affecting
hardness.
[0038] The following examples describe in detail specific tests that were conducted.
Example 1:
[0039] One medium grain sample having 91% WC and 9% Co was sintered in a continuous stoking
furnace in a disassociated ammonia atmosphere at 1450°C for one hour while surrounded
by an alumina sand heavily saturated in carbon and including 1% Boron Nitride. At
high magnification (5,200x) a third, inventive phase was discovered, and the sample
was analyzed.
[0040] The analysis was as follows:
Phase |
W |
Co |
C |
B |
O |
Third Phase |
71 |
24 |
0.6 |
4.0 |
--- |
Carbide Phase |
94.5 |
0.4 |
5(1) |
--- |
--- |
Binder Phase |
14(2) |
85 |
0.8 |
--- |
0.3 |
(1) Underestimated. |
(2) May be overestimated. |
[0041] It is expected that this third phase will form with tungsten and cobalt reacting
within a broad range of compositions, so long as there is sufficient carbon and boron
present in acceptable ratios to permit formation of the third inventive phase. The
third phase appears capable of existing within a range of compositions, with tungsten
varying within a range of 50 to 95 weight percent; cobalt between 5 and 50 weight
percent; carbon between 0.1 and 6.5 weight percent; and boron varying between 0.5
and 10.0 weight percent. It is expected that, within the third phase, the ratio of
tungsten to cobalt by weight will always be greater than 1.0. It is also expected
that the ratio of boron to carbon by weight in the third phase will always be greater
than 1.0.
Example 2:
[0042] A sample of extra fine grain tungsten carbide (WC) powder was mixed in a ratio of
94.5% WC/5.5% Co, mixed with a lubricant, and pressed into a shape. The shape was
surrounded with Al₂O₃ grains mixed with 2.5% BN powder by weight, placed in a graphite
boat, and both pre-sintered and sintered in a continuous stoking furnace. A sintering
temperature of 1410°C was maintained for about 70 minutes. During sintering, disassociated
ammonia gas (nitrogen and hydrogen) flowed through the furnace.
[0043] The resulting microstructure (prepared and etched with the acid etch as described
earlier) is shown in Figure 2. When comparing the treated microstructure in Figure
2 with the microstructure in Figure 1, which was prepared in the same way except that
no boron nitride was in the sintering sand, it will be noted that the sample which
was treated with boron exhibits an unusual feathery or lacy etched constituent. The
etched constituent is distributed fairly homogeneously throughout the sample. The
tips of the feathers or branches appear darker and thicker than the rest of the etched
constituent. Analyses which will be described later indicate that some form of boron
is present in the feathery structure.
Example 3:
[0044] A sample of a medium grain WC powder was mixed in a ratio of 87% WC/13% Co, mixed
with a lubricant, pressed into a shape, and, as in Example 2, sintered in a sand containing
2.5% by weight BN.
[0045] The sample was polished and etched with an acid etchant as described earlier, and
its microstructure is shown in Figure 4. Again, when comparing the microstructure
of Figure 4 with the microstructure of the same material sintered without BN, shown
in Figure 3, the microstructure of Figure 4 exhibits the branching etched constituent.
Again, the tips of the branches are thicker and darker than the rest.
Example 4:
[0046] A medium grain sample of 87% WC/13% Co was prepared as in Example 1 except that 0.5%
by weight of BN was added to the sand. Again, the branching effect is seen, and, upon
greater magnification, white spots appear as indicated by the arrows.
[0047] The emphasis placed on this unusual microstructure is because it was the first way
the invention was recognized and because it continues to be the easiest way to tell
that the boron has indeed migrated into the body.
Example 5:
[0048] Vermont American's OM1 grade, which is a medium grain WC powder mixed with a Co binder
powder in the ratio of 91% WC/9% Co was prepared and pressed with a lubricant into
saw tips of the design of Vermont American's Model C-3110-1 tips. The tips were coated
with a paint made of boron nitride (BN) mixed with water. The tips were dried under
vacuum so that presumably only BN remained on the tips, were then placed on standard
graphite trays provided for vacuum sintering, and were both pre-sintered and sintered
under vacuum. The vacuum furnace was purged with an inert gas before sintering, and
a vacuum was applied during the pre-sintering and sintering. The bodies were held
at a sintering temperature of 1410°C for sixty minutes, then cooled. The Rockwell
hardness (A scale) of the samples was 90.7, and the coercive force Hc was 80. The
saw tips, when etched, again exhibited the fanning or feathering pattern described
earlier throughout their microstructure.
Example 6:
[0049] The saw tip bodies were prepared as in Example 5 (91% WC/9% Co medium grain) except
that the painted bodies were pre-sintered and sintered in a continuous stoking furnace.
The coated samples were dried under vacuum, then surrounded by alumina (Al₂O₃) with
no boron mixed in the sand and placed on graphite boats. A sintering temperature of
1410°C was held for about 70 minutes, during which time disassociated ammonia flowed
through the furnace.
[0050] At the same time that the painted or coated samples were sintered, uncoated samples
were also sintered, and the test results were as follows:
|
Specific Gravity |
Rockwell A |
(Hc) |
Untreated tips |
14.68 |
90.5 |
142 |
Treated tips |
14.51 |
90.9 |
138 |
[0051] Again, the boron on the coated samples migrated throughout the samples, and the resulting
samples exhibited the feathery-looking rapid etch phase described earlier throughout
their structures, while the uncoated samples did not. The result is a homogeneous
sintered body with no surface coating or layer. It will be noted that specific gravity,
hardness, and coercive force showed no substantial change.
Example 7:
[0052] Saw tips which had originally been sintered without boron in Vermont American's Style
C-3170-1 from 91% WC powder medium grain mixed with 9% Co powder were resintered in
a continuous stoking furnace in a graphite boat surrounded by alumina sand mixed with
0.5% by weight BN powder. The sintering time and temperature and gas flows were as
in Example 2. Again, the distinctive feathering microstructure appeared.
[0053] The resulting saw tips were brazed onto 10", 40 tooth saw blades. The brazed joint
strength was tested with a drop weight impact test and compared with brazed joints
utilizing standard WC tips. The drop-weight impact test results for the boron-treated
tips were 166 inch-ounces versus 136 inch-ounces for the regular WC tips, an improvement
of 22%.
[0054] These blades were used to cut 3/4" medium density particle board, and power consumption
measurements were recorded after every 50 lineal feet cut. These blades were tested
against blades which were identical except their tips were either (1) untreated or
(2) treated by the "Borofuse" process, which is thought to deposit a boride layer
on the surface. The test results are shown in a graph in Figure 6, which shows a clear
improvement of the blade with tips made according to the present invention over the
other two blades. The blade of the present invention required considerably less consumption
of power than the other blades at all stages of the test. The power consumption is
directly related to the edge sharpness, so these tests indicate that the blades of
the present invention had better initial edge sharpness and better edge retention
than the others.
Example 8:
[0055] WC/Co bodies were sintered in alumina sand in a continuous stoking furnace with a
sintering temperature of 1410°C maintained for about 70 minutes. Samples were made
up of various WC/Co grades from micrograin size with 6% Co to medium grain with 13%
Co to extra-coarse grade with 6.5% Co. The amount of BN in the alumina sand varied
from 0% to 2.5% at 0.5% increments for each sample. The specific gravity, Rockwell
hardness, transverse rupture strength, coercive force, shrink factor and percent weight
loss were tested for each sample, and the test results showed that the amount of boron
nitride in the sand did not affect those properties to a degree greater than the variation
in normal manufacturing. The characteristic feathery constituent appeared in the microstructure
of each sample in which BN was present in the sand.
Example 9:
[0056] Carbide test plugs having the dimensions of 0.2 inches X 0.25 inches X 0.75 inches
were sintered from a medium grain powder of 91% WC/9% Co in alumina sand without any
boron present. Subsequently, these test plugs were re-sintered in alumina sand mixed
with different types of boron containing powder in a continuous stoking tube furnace
at 1410°C for about 70 minutes in an atmosphere of disassociated ammonia. In each
case, the microstructure showed the same distinct etching pattern indicating the diffusion
of boron into the carbide structure. The boron sources, hardness (RWA), and coercive
force (HC) results are shown below:
Type of Boron Source |
Amount in sand (Wt. %) |
RWA |
HC |
boron carbide |
.1 |
90.3 |
156 |
boron powder |
.1 |
90.5 |
162 |
boron oxide |
.5 |
90.8 |
158 |
boron oxide |
1.0 |
90.7 |
157 |
Example 10:
[0057]
A. A number of multicarbide grades were also tested. Metal cutting saw tips of Vermont
American style 170H280, grade MC115 which has a medium grain size and is made up of
77.1% WC, 11.4% Co, 4% TiC, 5.25% TaC, 2.25% NbC were resintered in alumina sand with
1.0% BN. The characteristic microstructure is again present, indicating that boron
has diffused throughout the structure.
B. The same style tips of grade MC85, which is a medium grain made up of 72.0% WC,
8.5% Co, 8% TiC, 11.5% TaC were also resintered in sand containing 1.0% BN, and the
characteristic feathery microstructure appeared again.
[0058] It is expected that other carbide formers could be used, such as, the IVB, VB and
VIB elements, for example: titanium, zirconium, hafnium, vanadium, niobium, tantalum,
chromium, molybdenum, and tungsten, and combinations thereof. Binder metals might
be manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, aluminum, silicon, ruthenium, osmium used
alone, in combination with each other, or in combination with each other and with
any of the IVB, VB and VIB elements listed earlier as carbide formers.
Example 11:
[0059] Below is a table showing the impact of varying percentages of boron-nitride material
added to the alumina sintering sand on the corrosion resistance of the bodies. All
of the samples analyzed in this table were prepared from 91% WC/9% Co powders of medium
grade and all were sintered in graphite boats surrounded by Al₂O₃ sintering sand doped
with different amounts of boron-containing material (BN) under the same conditions
(disassociated ammonia atmosphere with sintering temperature of 1410°C for about 1
hour); the only difference in their treatment was the percent by weight of boron-containing
material (BN) added to the Al₂O₃ sintering sand.
[0060] To test for corrosion resistance, each sample was weighed, placed in HCl for 24 hours
at room temperature, then weighed again to determine the percent weight loss due to
corrosion. The smallest amount of corrosion occurred with a BN doping of 0.9%.
% BN/Sintering Media Ratio |
% Weight Loss |
0 |
00.057 |
.1 |
00.113 |
.5 |
00.056 |
.9 |
00.012 |
2.0 |
00.0215 |
25.0 |
00.0357 |
50.0 |
00.0494 |
75.0 |
00.0580 |
100.0 |
00.0781 |
[0061] Additional tests were conducted to see how much or how little BN was needed on the
sand in order to obtain the feathery microstructures, and it was found that the present
invention is successful in incorporating boron into the bulk chemistry of a WC/Co
carbide body with as little as .006% BN added to the sintering sand and with as much
as a total replacement of the sintering sand with BN. The practical working range
of the present invention for WC/Co carbide bodies appears to be to utilize between
0.1 and 5.5% of boron-nitride material in the sintering sand. Optimum corrosion resistance
was achieved with a BN doping of about 0.9% in the alumina sand. It will be seen from
other tests described below that other optimum characteristics seem to occur with
about the same amount of doping.
Example 12:
[0062] Fracture toughness and Eddy Current tests were conducted on various types of samples
made in accordance with the present invention. The first group of samples was made
with Vermont American's grade 2M12, a coarse grain 89.5% WC/10.5% Co. Varying amounts
of boron nitride were mixed in the alumina. The second group of samples was made with
Vermont American's grade OM2, a fine grain 94% WC/ 6% Co. Varying amounts of boron
nitride were mixed in the alumina sand. The sintering was done in a disassociated
ammonia atmosphere in a continuous stoking furnace with the sintering temperature
of 1410°C held for about 70 minutes.
[0063] A bulk analysis is shown in the table below.
% by Weight BN in the sand |
ppm Boron for OM2 samples |
ppm Boron for 2M12 samples |
0.5 |
336.6±2.4 |
377.5±2.6 |
1.0 |
383.4±3.1 |
408.9±2.9 |
1.5 |
376.3±2.3 |
537.4±3.8 |
2.0 |
543.0±3.8 |
806.9±4.8 |
2.5 |
501.4±4.0 |
730.8±3.6 |
[0064] In order to measure fracture toughness, the samples were made up in short cylindrical
rods of 0.5 inch diameter and .750 inch height, and a cut was then made into the rod
in accordance with the procedure set out in
International Journal of Fracture, Vol. 15, No. 6, Dec. 1979, pp. 515-536, which is hereby incorporated by reference.
[0065] Figure 6 shows a plot of apparent fracture toughness (Ka) versus percentage by weight
of boron nitride in the alumina sand. The apparent Fracture Toughness (Ka) shows significant
improvement for each alloy upon the addition of BN to the sand. It appears that percent
by weight of BN in the sand of between 0.5 and 2 gives optimum fracture toughness.
This translates to an amount of boron in the sand of 0.2 to 0.9 percent by weight.
[0066] Figures 7 and 8 are plots of Eddy current results for the same samples. The peak
for the OM2 grade is at 1.5% BN in the sand for both fracture toughness and Eddy Current,
and the 2M12 grade peaks at 1.0%BN in the sand for both tests. These appear to be
the optimum BN dopings.
[0067] Additional analysis of these samples indicates that the concentration of Boron in
these samples is greater toward the outside and gradually reduces to a lower concentration
toward the center. It has been demonstrated that a post treatment diffusion process
at elevated temperatures of 1410°C for about 70 minutes will produce a more uniform
distribution of the etch pattern in large samples in which a change in boron concentration
from surface to core has been observed. When this was done, the morphology of the
third phase changed from feathery to rounded clusters, so it is possible for the boron
to be distributed throughout the body without the presence of a feathery etch phase.
[0068] Another analysis of these samples was done for the distribution of boron in the samples
and found that the boron is distributed in a fern-type pattern which is virtually
identical to the pattern shown in the treated metal when etched with acid or Murakami's
reagent. Because the distribution of boron is in the same pattern displayed by the
acid etch of the treated metal sample described earlier, the conclusion is drawn that
boron is present in the fern-type pattern that is revealed when the treated metal
samples are etched.
Example 13:
[0069] A test was conducted with commercial sawmill blades in which a standard WC/Co tipped
blade was tested against the identical blade in which fine grain tips of 94% WC/6%Co,
already-sintered under the standard process, were re-sintered in a continuous stoking
furnace in alumina sand mixed with 1% BN by weight. The standard blade lasted 40 hours.
The blade with re-sintered tips treated according to the present invention lasted
462 hours and was still cutting well when it was removed for evaluation.
Example 14:
[0070] A test was conducted with carbide-tipped circular saw blades, comparing the standard
94% WC/6% Co fine grain tips to identical tips re-sintered in 1% BN mixed in the alumina
sand. Both blades were cutting copper tubing. The standard blade made 5,408 cuts,
and the treated blade made 22,743 cuts. The treated blade was then resharpened and
made 16,000 more cuts.
Example 15:
[0071] This test was done to compare the treated and non-treated carbide tips in cutting
fiberglass. The tips were made of fine grain 95.5% WC/4.5% Co, and some tips were
treated by re-sintering in alumina sand with 1% BN added. The tips were put on hole
saws. The regular untreated carbide tipped hole saws cut 16-18 fiberglass panels.
The hole saw with treated tips cut 24 fiberglass panels.
Example 16:
[0072] A test was run to see what would happen if unsintered carbide bodies were sintered
in pure boron powder. Saw tips were placed on trays in a vacuum furnace. Argon gas
was present at the full sinter temperature and disassociated ammonia was present at
intermediate temperatures. The green (unsintered) body was surrounded by boron powder
and sintered. The result was a deformed plug with a surface layer. Thus, sintering
in 100% boron powder does not achieve the present invention.
[0073] However, other carbide bodies which were in the same furnace during this test, were
not surrounded by the boron powder and were remote from it, and some of these remote
bodies showed the feathery microstructure, indicating that boron had entered into
their microstructure. This indicates that the boron entered the body in a gas phase
and raises the possibility that the desired homogeneous boron dispersion in the body
could be accomplished by passing some type of boron-containing gas through the furnace
during sintering. It is thought that the boron could be supplied by boron-containing
inorganic or organometallic compounds having vaporization temperatures convenient
for the introduction of their vapors or of gaseous, boron-containing breakdown species
into the treatment zone.
Example 17:
[0074] Tests were conducted to see whether the atmosphere in the sintering furnace affected
the amount of boron in the sample. In these tests, the samples were OM1 grade containing
91% WC and 9% Co. They were sintered in a continuous stoking furnace in a sand containing
1% BN, and were sintered at 1400°c for one hour. After sintering, a bulk analysis
was done to determine the amount of boron in the sample. It was found that an ammonia
atmosphere permitted much more boron to enter the microstructure than did a nitrogen
atmosphere and that a pure hydrogen atmosphere permitted even more boron to enter
the microstructure. In the case of an atmosphere of N₂ or dry N₂, the sintered sample
contained about 30 parts per million (ppm) of boron. In the NH₃ atmosphere, the sample
contained about 430 ppm boron, and the dry NH₃ atmosphere produced a sample having
365 ppm boron. The pure dry hydrogen produced a sample having 1376 ppm boron.
[0075] It will be obvious to those skilled in the art that modifications may be made to
the embodiments described above without departing from the scope of the present invention.
1. A cemented carbide body, comprising:
a tungsten carbide phase;
a cobalt binder phase; and
a third phase comprising cobalt, tungsten, boron, and carbon.
2. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 1, wherein the ratio by weight of tungsten
to cobalt in the third phase is greater than 1.0.
3. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 2, wherein the ratio by weight of boron
to carbon in the third phase is greater than 1.0.
4. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 3, wherein the ratio by weight of boron
to carbon in the third phase is between 1.0 and 12.0.
5. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 1, wherein the tungsten carbide particles
are generally angular and blocky in shape but, in the region of the third phase, the
tungsten carbide particles are rounded and smaller.
6. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 1, wherein the average dimensions of
the third phase are larger than the average dimensions of the cobalt binder phase.
7. A method for producing a cemented carbide body, comprising the steps of:
a) preparing a shape including a carbide material and a binder material; and
b) sintering said shape in the presence of a boron-containing material, such that
appreciable quantities of boron from said boron-containing material migrate into said
shape and become dispersed throughout the microstructure of the shape to a depth of
at least 0.125 inches or completely throughout the shape if the shape is less than
0.125 inches thick.
8. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein the
microstructure of said shape, after sintering, exhibits a feathery etch phase throughout
the body when etched with a standard acid etchant.
9. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein said
sintering is done in a disassociated ammonia atmosphere.
10. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7 wherein said
sintering is done in a hydrogen atmosphere.
11. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein
said shape is sintered in the presence of a boron-containing material from the following
group: boron powder, boron nitride, boron oxide, boron carbide, AlB₂, AlB₁₂, CrB,
CrB₂, Cr3B₅, MoB, NbB₆, NbB₂, B₃Si, B₄Si, B₆Si, TaB, TaB₂, TiB₂, WB, W₂B₅, W₂B, VB₂,
and ZrB₂.
12. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein
said shape is immersed during sintering in a sintering sand with an admixture of boron-containing
material from the following group: Boron nitride, boron, boron oxide, and boron carbide.
13. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein,
during sintering, said shape is immersed in a sintering sand with an admixture of
boron- containing material in which boron is from 0.003 to 50 percent by weight of
the sand mixture.
14. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein
said shape is immersed in a sintering media with an admixture of 0.003 to 50 percent
by weight boron in the form of a boron-containing material selected from the following
group: BN, boron, boron oxide, and boron carbide.
15. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7 or 9, wherein,
during sintering, said shape is immersed in a sintering sand with an admixture of
boron-nitride of 0.05 to 2 percent by weight.
16. A method as recited in Claim 7, wherein said shape has been sintered before, and
the present operation is a re-sintering of said previously sintered body.
17. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7 wherein said
shape is painted with a boron-containing paint prior to sintering.
18. A method for producing a cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 7, wherein
said shape is placed in contact with a surface which has been coated with a boron-containing
material prior to sintering.
19. A method for producing a cemented carbide body, comprising the steps of:
providing a shape including a carbide material and a binder material;
immersing said shape in a sintering sand having an admixture with a controlled amount
of boron-containing material;
and wherein the sintering of said shape in said sand is done under controlled conditions
to provide a gradient of some form of boron throughout said shape, with the amount
of boron being greater at the outside and gradually reducing in concentration toward
the center;
such that the microstructure of the resulting sintered body, upon treatment with an
acid etchant, exhibits a feathery etched structure.
20. A cemented carbide body, comprising:
a) a carbide phase, including a carbide former and carbon;
b) a binder phase made mostly of a binder element; and
c) a dispersion of boron-containing material throughout the body, wherein the microstructure
of said carbide body, when etched with Murakami's Reagent, exhibits an etch phase
throughout the body.
21. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 20, wherein:
a) the carbide former is a member of the group: titanium, zirconium, hafnium, vanadium,
niobium, tantalum, chromium, molybdenum, and tungsten;
b) the binder phase is from the group: manganese, iron, cobalt, nickel, copper, aluminum,
silicon, ruthenium, and osmium; and
c) the amount of boron in the body is between 25 and 3000 parts per million.
22. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 20, wherein the carbide phase is WC
and the binder phase is Cobalt.
23. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 1 or 20, wherein the amount of boron
in the body is between 25 and 3000 parts per million.
24. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 20 or 22, wherein the distribution
of the amount of boron in the body is a controlled gradient, with greater concentrations
of boron and the etch phase at the surface and lesser concentrations towards the
center of said body.
25. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 20, wherein said etch phase also includes
a greater percent by weight of the carbide former than is found in the binder phase.
26. A cemented carbide body, comprising:
a) a carbide phase;
b) a binder phase having less than 30 percent by weight of carbide former; and
c) a third phase including a binder material and boron.
27. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 26, wherein said third phase also
includes at least 40% by weight of carbide former.
28. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 26, wherein the carbide former is
tungsten and said third phase includes approximately 60% by weight of tungsten.
29. A cemented carbide body as recited in Claim 20, wherein said etch phase, before
being etched, includes some of the carbide former, some of the binder element, some
carbon, and some boron, and wherein the ratio by weight of carbide former to binder
element in the etch phase is greater than 1.0.