BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Field of the Invention
[0001] The present invention relates to a surface hardened austenitic stainless steel part
for improving wear resistance and its manufacturing method.
Background Art
[0002] Austenitic stainless steels have been utilized in various fields, required for corrosion
resistance such as food machines, machines for chemical fields, plants and auto-motive
engines and others. Among them there are many applications, also required for wear
resistance, like sliding machine parts such as shafts and the like, valves and the
like, gears and the like and so on. To improve this wear resistance, hardening by
heat treatment such as quenching or the like, or surface-hardening such as carburizing,
carbonitriding or the like is often applied to machine structural carbon steels, alloy
steels and tool steels and the like.
[0003] In a case of austenitic stainless steel it is not hardened by quenching. Thus since
sufficient hardness cannot be obtained by carburizing in the austenitic stainless
steel, when it is necessary to harden the surface of the stainless steel particularly,
wet plating such as hard chromium plating or the like, coating of a hard layer by
PVD (Physical Vapor Deposition) or nitriding of the surface or the like is performed.
However, coating of a film by plating or PVD or the like has a drawback in adhesive
properties of the film with the base material. Particularly, when a surface pressure
is increased, the coating cannot be applied stably.
[0004] On the other hand, a surface nitriding treatment is a method in which nitrogen is
penetrated through a surface to harden it. Stainless steel containing much Cr (Chromium)
is generally difficult to nitride for the sake of the presence of an oxide film. However,
the nitriding of the stainless steel becomes easy by use of a hydrochloric acid treatment
process, a halide treatment process, or ion-nitriding treatment process or the like.
These processes are often utilized as a surface-hardening method of austenitic stainless
steel.
[0005] The surface hardening of the austenitic stainless steel is needed for improving its
fatigue strength. However, it is further needed for the sake of improving its wear
resistance. The improvement of the wear resistance suppresses wear on a sliding surface
of a sliding part to improve durability thereof. Additionally the improvement of the
wear resistance has such effects that wear loss in a tool for polishing or cutting
is reduced and scratching of a surface of a stainless steel part is suppressed.
[0006] Nitriding treatment is not necessary to quench unlike the carburizing treatment.
Accordingly, in the nitriding treatment the surface can be hardened by a comparatively
low temperature treatment. However, there is the most suitable temperature for increasing
the surface hardness, and if the thickness of a hardened layer is increased at the
temperature, it takes long time for nitriding. Otherwise, if the temperature is increased
the thickness of the hardened layer can be increased. However, the obtained surface
hardness is decreased.
[0007] Further, to improve the wear resistance of sliding parts, higher surface hardness
of the parts is better. However, when a surface hardening treatment is performed at
a decreased temperature, a hard layer such as a compound layer can be produced on
the surface layer of the part. Nevertheless, the hard layer is brittle and the wear
resistance is not necessarily improved.
[0008] As described above, although the method using the nitriding is important as a surface-hardening
method of the austenitic stainless steel, sufficiently satisfactory hardening method
cannot be necessarily obtained.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0009] The object of the present invention is to provide an austenitic stainless steel part
excellent in wear resistance, which is used in a sliding portion or the like, has
high surface hardness and has sufficient hardness in a portion just below the surface,
and its manufacturing method.
[0010] The present inventors have studied variously to improve the performance of austenitic
stainless steel surface-hardened by gas nitriding. Although the surface nitriding
process of the stainless steel includes ion nitriding, the nitriding is performed
under a reduced pressure and the treatment speed is slow and even the shape to be
nitrided can be limited. On the contrary, gas nitriding can be treated in high amounts,
and it has been considered that the gas nitriding is suitable for mass production.
[0011] Therefore, regarding the surface hardening of the austenitic stainless steel by gas
nitriding, steels having various different compositions were prepared, and influences
of the gas compositions and treatment conditions on the surface hardness and hardened
depth of the steel by gas nitriding have been studied variously.
[0012] In the case, while using a furnace that can shut out the outside air, gas containing
fluoride of 10 volume % of NF
3 and the remaining of N
2 was led to the furnace and the steels were maintained for thirty minutes so that
the surfaces of the steels were activated. After that nitriding gas containing NF
3 was injected into the furnace and temperature and time were variously changed for
nitriding treatment.
[0013] The surface hardness of the steel by nitriding generally reaches about 1200 to 1300
HV. However, although a harder compound layer can be formed on the surface of the
steel by treatment conditions, it is generally considered that the compound layer
is so brittle that it cannot be utilized. In examinations using these austenitic stainless
steels, steel having a surface hardness of 1350 HV or more at Vickers hardness was
found.
[0014] This hard surface layer is not a brittle compound layer, which has been obtained
in machine structural steels, ferritic stainless steels and the like, but it has sufficient
toughness. Thus, after preparing test pieces for wear tests, wear resistances were
checked. As a result, it has been recognized that the wear resistances are extremely
excellent.
[0015] Then, the thus hard surface obtained steel members were examined in detail. As a
result, the following points have been found.
(a) A compound layer is recognized on the surface layer.
(b) The steel is an austenitic stainless steel containing much Mn (Manganese).
(c) The atmosphere used in nitriding treatment contains, in addition to NH3, carburizing gas such as RX gas or the like.
[0016] In the case of a machine structural steel or a ferritic stainless steel, a compound
layer often appears on the surface layer depending on treatment conditions. It is
considered that this compound layer was formed by increasing the content of active
nitrogen on the surface layer, produced by decomposition of NH
3 due to the advancing of nitriding, and by nitriding Fe, Cr or the like with the increased
nitrogen.
[0017] However, in the case of an austenitic stainless steel such a compound layer does
not usually appear. It is considered that the solubility of nitrogen in an austenitic
phase of the steel is significantly larger than in a ferritic phase of the steel,
and nitrogen is diffused into the steel and an increase of nitrogen on the surface
of the steel is difficult to arise whereby a compound layer is not formed.
[0018] However, in the case of an austenitic stainless steel containing much Mn, when it
is treated in a nitriding and carburizing atmosphere, a compound layer appears on
the steel. The treatment-performed test pieces exhibited excellent wear resistance.
[0019] The reason of such a result is not necessarily clear. However, if the facts of the
above-mentioned (a), (b) and (c) are also considered, the following assumption is
obtained.
[0020] First, hardening by nitriding treatment which is performed at a lower temperature
compared with usual carburizing temperature is obtained by the formation of fine nitride
precipitates and an increase of soluble nitrogen. In the cases of the machine structural
steel and the ferritic stainless steel, since the steels have ferritic phases and
small solubility of nitrogen, a compound layer is liable to be formed. However, since
in a portion just below the compound layer the content of nitrogen is not increased,
the hardness of the steel is low and there is a large difference of hardness between
the compound layer and the portion just below the compound layer.
[0021] Therefore, the steel cannot hold a hard and brittle compound layer sufficiently and
the hard compound layer is easily broken by small stress. Thus, only brittleness is
prominent and the hard compound layer is not made full use of.
[0022] On the contrary, in the case of the austenitic stainless steel an austenitic phase
has significantly larger solubility of nitrogen than the ferritic phase. It was seemed
that the appearance of a compound layer in the austenitic steel containing much Mn
was due to the fact that Ni is small.
[0023] The purpose of causing much Mn to contain into the austenitic stainless steel resizes
in suppressing the use of expensive Ni, and when much Mn is contained in the steel,
the Ni content is surely low. Ni is said to be an element, which generally prevents
nitriding, and since Ni is small, penetration of nitrogen and penetration of carbon
become easy. Therefore, it is assumed that the nitrogen content near the surface of
the steel during nitriding is further increased as compared with a case where the
austenitic stainless steel contains a small amount of Mn and a large amount of Ni.
[0024] Further, when carburizing gas containing CO and CH
4 such as an RX gas exists in a nitriding atmosphere, carburizing advances simultaneously.
Thus, nitrogen dissolved in the steel has the same effect as a case where the nitrogen
content was increased by the presence of dissolved carbon and a compound is easy to
be formed on the surface of the steel. A portion just below a compound layer having
an austenitic phase contains dissolved nitrogen and dissolved carbon more than the
case of a ferritic phase, since the solubility of the portion just below the compound
layer is large.
[0025] Thus, the solubility content of nitrogen is high since the austenitic steel has an
austenitic phase, and the penetration of nitrogen is actively performed since Ni content
is low. Additionally, a compound layer is easy to be formed by the penetration of
carbon. Further, the hardness of the portion just below the compound is significantly
increased since large amounts of fine carbide and nitride having high solid solubility
content are formed.
[0026] Therefore, it is considered that since the compound layer is held by the lower layer
having sufficient strength, the brittleness of the compound layer is compensated,
resulting in that the compound layer has become a surface-strengthened layer excellent
in wear resistance. In order to improve wear resistance, it is important to have higher
surface hardness as well as a suitably-thick strengthened layer having intermediate
hardness between the base and the hard surface layer.
[0027] Therefore, various investigations of the compositions of steels, nitriding treatment
conditions, various properties of the obtained surface hardened parts and the like
were performed with respect to an austenitic stainless steel containing much Mn. Based
on the result of a review limits by which such results can be obtained were clarified
and the present invention was accomplished. The gist of the present invention is as
follows.
(1) A surface-carbonitrided stainless steel part excellent in wear resistance, in
which Mn of 3 to 20 mass % is contained in the steel and a surface of the steel was
carbonitrided to be hardened, characterized in that Vickers hardnesses of the surface
are 1350 HV or more and depths of a hardened layer having 1000 HV or more are 10 µm
or more.
(2) A manufacturing method of a surface-carbonitrided stainless steel part excellent
in wear resistance according to the above mentioned (1), characterized in that after
a stainless steel part containing 3 to 20 mass % of Mn, molded in a required shape,
was surface activated in an atmosphere containing halogen gas or halide gas, the obtained
stainless steel part is carbonitrided at 430 to 600 °C in an atmosphere containing
NH3 and carburizing gas.
DETAILRED DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENT
[0028] A steel, which is manufactured to a part of the present invention, is an austenitic
stainless steel containing 3 to 20 mass % of Mn. The reason for Mn content of 3 mass
% or more is that in a case of an austenitic steel when Mn is decreased, Ni content
is increased and surface hardening hardness due to nitriding is not significantly
increased. On the other hand, when the Mn content is increased the corrosion resistance
for the austenitic stainless steel becomes deteriorated. Thus, the Mn content is set
to at most 20 mass %.
[0029] Such stainless steels include for example SUS 201, SUS 202, SUS 304J2, SUH 35, SUH
36 and the like in the JIS standard. The compositions other than Mn are not particularly
limited if they are in ranges, which belong to the austenitic stainless steels. Nevertheless,
it is preferable that the Ni content is, if possible, smaller than the Mn content
since there is a possibility that sufficient surface hardness of the steel cannot
be obtained.
[0030] The hardness of a carbonitrized surface is set to 1350 HV or more. This is because
sufficiently high wear resistance cannot be obtained when the hardness thereof is
lower than 1350 HV. Thus, in addition to the surface hardness of 1350 HV or more,
the depth of a hardened layer whose hardness is 1000 HV or more is set to 10 µm or
more.
[0031] This is because in a case where the hardness of a hardened layer just below a surface
compound layer is lower than 1000 HV, when the depth of the hardened layer is less
than 10 µm, any surface hardness not only reaches a level lower than 1350 HV, but
also a surface compound layer becomes brittle and wear resistance deteriorates.
[0032] The austenitic stainless steel part surface hardened in the above-mentioned conditions
cannot be obtained by only nitriding. Thus it is necessary to manufacture the part
by carbonitriding. As the surface nitriding of the austenitic stainless steel there
is a method in which the surface of the steel is heated in an atmosphere containing
halogen gas or halide gas to activate the surface, and nitriding gas containing NH
3 is introduced into a furnace and the heated surface of the steel is nitrided. In
the present invention carbonitriding is performed according to the method of using
the halogen or halide.
[0033] First, by using a heating container which may be hermetically closed, an austenitic
steel is heated at 200 to 550 °C for 10 minutes to 3 hours in atmosphere containing
0.5 to 20 volume % of halogen gas or halide gas such as F
2, Cl
2, HCl or NF
3 and the balance of nitrogen, hydrogen or inactive gas to activate the surface of
the steel.
[0034] After the surface of the steel was activated, the surface is carbonitrided by heating
at a temperature range of 430 to 600 °C for 20 minutes or more in a mixed gas atmosphere
containing NH
3 for nitriding and CO or CH
4 for carbonizing.
[0035] These carbonitriding atmospheric gases include 10 to 95 volume % of NH
3 and 5 to 30 volume % of one of CO or CH
4, or both of them. The reason for 10 volume % or more of NH
3 is that if NH
3 is less than 10 volume %, nitriding cannot be performed sufficiently and a hardened
layer cannot be obtained. 100 volume % NH
3 may be used for the purpose of nitriding. However, since it is necessary to use a
carbonizing gas, NH
3 is contained by at most 95 volume %.
[0036] For the purpose of carbonizing, 5 volume % or more of one of CO or CH
4 or both of them is needed. However, when these gas ratio is too increased, soot is
generated. Accordingly, the gas content is set to at most 30 volume %.
[0037] The carbonitriding atmospheric gas may contain NH
3 and CO or CH
4 by enough contents for nitriding and for carbonizing the surface of the steel, and
other components may be inactive gas, hydrogen, nitrogen or other hydrocarbon gases
and the like, which are not limited. Further, if the above-mentioned composition ranges
are satisfied as in a case where NH
3 is mixed to RX gas, carbonitriding gas may be prepared by mixing carburizing gas,
which has been used, with NH
3.
[0038] When the carbonitriding temperature is less than 430 °C or less, surface hardness
of 1350 HV or more cannot be obtained. Additionally, a development of a hardened layer
of 1000 HV or more becomes insufficient. This is because nitriding advances but carboniding
does not advance significantly. When the carbonitriding temperature reaches 430 °C
or more, these surface hardness and hardened layer can be obtained. However, when
the carbonitriding temperature exceeds 600 °C, not only a surface hardness of 1350
HV or more cannot be obtained, but also corrosion resistance as a stainless steel
is reduced.
[0039] Further, when the carbonitriding time is less than 20 minutes, there is a possibility
that a surface compound layer cannot be obtained, and a surface hardness of 1350 HV
or more cannot be obtained. If the carbonitriding time is 20 minutes or more, the
limitation of the time is not needed. Then the carbonitriding time is increased, the
thickness in a hardened layer of 1000 HV or more can be increased. However, wear resistance
is not improved more than a certain level and it is preferable that the carbonitriding
time is within at most 50 hours since corrosion resistance can be deteriorated.
[0040] Examples of stainless steel parts, which are required for wear resistance and to
which the present invention is effectively applied, are described as follows. Those
are sliding mechanical parts including an engine valve, a compressor shaft, a compressor
vane, a piston ring, a bearing ball, a micro motor shaft, a motor shaft, and the like.
Further, fluid wear resistant parts include a filter mesh, a nozzle, a valve, a piping
joint, a reducer, a pump and the like. Furthermore, fastening parts include a bolt,
a nut, a screw, a tapping screw, and the like. Further, tools and the like include
a dresser, a cutting saw, a wire saw, a saw, a drill and the like. The stainless parts
can also be applied to an extrusion mold, a die cast mold, an injection die and the
like.
(Examples)
[0041] Stainless steels having compositions shown in Table 1 were used. First, they were
cut to prepare disk-shaped test pieces of 35 mm in diameter and 10 mm in thickness.
In a case where the test piece is used as a rotating test piece for an Amsler wear
test, the circumferential surface of the disk is further polished in a mirror surface
to remove edges. The obtained test pieces were heated at 300 °C and the heating was
maintained in an atmosphere containing NF
3 to perform nitriding or carbonitriding thereby hardening the surfaces of the test
pieces. The atmospheric gases, temperatures and treatment time during surface-nitriding
are shown in Table 2.
[0042] In reference to surface hardened test pieces the surface hardness was measured at
Vickers hardness (HV0.1) of test force of 0.9806 N, and the hardness distribution
in cross-section was measured at Vickers hardness (HV0.05) of test force of 0.4903
N. The concave mark obtained after the measurement of surface hardness, was observed
with an optical microscope at 100 fold and when generation of chipping or a crack
was recognized, the test piece was determined to be brittleness failure.
[0043] Amsler wear test was performed as follows. In two cylindrical rolling abrasion testers
circumferential surfaces of the above-mentioned test pieces were pressed against cylindrical
metal surfaces (made of SKH52) of 35 mm and 50 mm in diameter at 150 kg, and the abrasion
testers were rolled in the same direction in sliding portions. Then the sliding speed
was set to 0.12 m/sec and specific abrasion wear [mg/(m · sec)] was obtained without
lubrication.
Table 1
Steel Mark |
Chemical Composition (Mass %) [Balance: Impurities and Fe] |
Remarks |
|
C |
Si |
Mn |
Cr |
Ni |
Mo |
N |
|
A |
0.05 |
0.2 |
9.5 |
13.5 |
2.5 |
1.0 |
0.15 |
Range of the present invention |
B |
0.05 |
0.5 |
10.0 |
11.0 |
5.0 |
1.0 |
0.05 |
Range of the present invention |
C |
0.05 |
0.5 |
10.0 |
22.0 |
5.0 |
2.0 |
0.10 |
Range of the present invention |
D |
0.03 |
0.5 |
*2.5 |
25.0 |
7.0 |
3.5 |
0.30 |
Out of the range |
Mark * shows out of range defined in the present invention. |
[0044] The results of the abrasion test are shown in Table 2 on the next page. The test
pieces of test Nos. 1 to 3 in which an austenitic stainless steel of a sufficiently
high Mn content was used and carbonitriding was performed as a surface hardening treatment,
exhibit excellent low specific abrasion wear. This is assumed to be the facts that
the steel has a high surface hardness, which exceeds 1400 HV, and a hardened layer
depth having 1000 HV or more.

[0045] On the contrary, even if a test piece of test No. 6 is the austenitic stainless steel
of the high Mn content, the surface hardening treatment is not carbonitriding. Accordingly,
the surface hardness of the test piece of test No. 6 is not sufficient and is brittle.
Next, in a test piece of test No. 5 since a carbonitriding temperature is low a hardened
depth of 1000 HV or more is 7 µm, which is shallow. Further, although a surface hardening
treatment of carbonitriding in a test piece of test No. 4 was performed, since the
test piece of test No. 4 is an austenitic stainless steel of a low Mn content, the
surface hardness is less than 300 HV All cases of test Nos. 4 to 6 exhibit large specific
abrasion wear and worse results as compared with the cases of test Nos. 1 to 3 according
to the present invention.
[0046] As described above, by applying the parts of the present invention to various mechanical
parts, to which austenitic stainless steel is applied, particularly to parts required
for sliding and wear resistance, their service life can be improved significantly.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
[0047] According to the surface carbonitrided stainless steel part of the present invention
and its manufacturing method, by setting a Vickers hardness of the surface to 1350
HV or more and setting a depth of a hardened layer having 1000 HV or more from the
surface of the steel to 10 µm or more, when the part according to the present invention
is applied to a part required for sliding and wear resistance particularly, the service
life can be improved significantly. Further, since the manufacturing method is performed
by only heating in a gas atmosphere, a large number of parts can be simultaneously
treated. Thus the stainless steel parts of the present invention can be adopted to
sliding mechanical parts, fluide wear resistant parts, fastening parts and tools and
the like as stainless steel parts required for wear resistance. Therefore, the present
invention can be applied to wide fields.