Technical Field
[0001] The present disclosure relates to a method for producing a steel material, an apparatus
for cooling a steel material, and a steel material.
Background Art
[0002] One of the longest steel materials is a rail for railways. In particular, a rail
where a rail head section has a pearlite structure high in hardness is, for example,
produced as follows.
[0003] First, bloom cast by continuous casting is reheated to 1100°C or more, and thereafter
hot rolled by rough rolling and finish rolling so as to have a predetermined rail
shape. The rolling method in each rolling step is performed by a combination of caliber
rolling and universal rolling, or by only caliber rolling, and such rough rolling
is performed for a plurality of passes and such finish rolling is performed for a
plurality of passes or a single pass. The rail here usually has a length of about
50 m to 200 m by hot rolling.
[0004] Next, an unsteady section at an end of the rail hot rolled is hot sawn (hot sawing
step). In the case where a heat treatment apparatus is here limited with respect to
the length, further sawing is performed so that a predetermined length (for example,
25 m) is achieved.
[0005] After the hot sawing step, a coolant (air, water, mist, or the like) is sprayed to
the rail in a cooling apparatus, thereby performing forced cooling (heat treatment
step). In the heat treatment step, the rail is restricted by a restraint apparatus
such as a clamp, and the coolant is sprayed to a head section, a foot section, and
also, if necessary, a web. The cooling apparatus usually performs cooling until the
temperature of the head section of the rail reaches 650°C or less. After such forced
cooling is completed, the rail is released from the restraint apparatus, and is further
conveyed to a cooling bed and cooled to 100°C or less.
[0006] In the case where the rail for railways is, for example, a rail for use in a severe
environment where heavy goods such as coal and iron ore are transported from any mine
of natural resources such as coal, such a rail is demanded to have high wear resistance
and high toughness, and therefore the heat treatment step is required. The heat treatment
is performed, thereby enabling the rail to be high in hardness and decreasing the
amount of wear in use, and therefore the effects of increasing the rail replacement
period and decreasing the life-time cost are achieved. A case where the variation
in hardness is large in the longitudinal direction of the rail, however, is not preferable
because the amount of wear is larger at a low-hardness section than a high-hardness
section, thereby not only increasing the vibration in train running, but also decreasing
the replacement period. Thus, there is demanded a heat treatment method which allows
the rail to be small in the variation in hardness and high in hardness.
[0007] For example, PTL 1 discloses a method for suppressing a cooling rate to 7°C/sec or
less, as a method for decreasing the variation in hardness of a rail.
[0008] Moreover, PTL 2 discloses a method for oscillating an H-shaped steel in an amount
obtained by an Equation with the pitch between nozzles being adopted as a parameter
in accelerated cooling of the H-shaped steel, as a method for uniformly cooling a
steel material. Furthermore, PTL 3 discloses a method for oscillating a steel material
at a distance 5 times to 10 times the distance in the longitudinal direction of the
material of a guide roller, as a method for uniformly cooling a steel material.
Citation List
Patent Literature
Summary of Invention
Technical Problem
[0010] The method described in PTL 1 can decrease the influence of the variation in temperature
at the start of a heat treatment in the longitudinal direction of a steel material
on the variation in hardness. In the heat treatment, however, in the case where the
variation in cooling rate is caused in the longitudinal direction of a steel material,
uniform hardness is not achieved. Therefore, it is difficult to produce a steel material
uniform in material properties in the longitudinal direction.
[0011] While the methods described in PTLs 2 and 3 can alleviate the reduction in cooling
rate due to a weak cooling section generated in cooling equipment, it is difficult
to provide a uniform cooling rate in the case where the variation in cooling rate
is caused between cooling headers in the longitudinal direction of a steel material.
Therefore, it is difficult to produce a steel material uniform in material properties
such as hardness in the longitudinal direction.
[0012] The present invention has been then made in consideration of the above problems,
and an object thereof is to provide a method for producing a steel material uniform
in material properties in the longitudinal direction, an apparatus for cooling a steel
material, and a steel material.
Solution to Problem
[0013] One aspect of the present invention provides a method for producing a steel material,
wherein, when a cooling apparatus having a plurality of cooling sections disposed
side by side in the longitudinal direction of a steel material cools the steel material
hot worked or cooled/reheated, the steel material is conveyed at a conveyance distance
L
o (m) satisfying Equation (1), in one direction along with the longitudinal direction
of the steel material, in the cooling apparatus:
Lo: conveyance distance (m) of steel material
m: natural number
Lh: length (m) of cooling sections in longitudinal direction of steel material.
[0014] One aspect of the present invention provides an apparatus for cooling a steel material
hot worked or cooled/reheated, including: a plurality of cooling sections disposed
side by side in the longitudinal direction of the steel material; and a conveyance
section that conveys the steel material at a conveyance distance L
o (m) satisfying Equation (1), in one direction along with the longitudinal direction
of the steel material in the cooling apparatus, during cooling of the steel material
in the cooling sections.
[0015] One aspect of the present invention provides a steel material produced by hot working
or cooling/reheating and thereafter cooling in a cooling apparatus having a plurality
of cooling sections disposed side by side in a longitudinal direction, wherein, during
cooling in the cooling apparatus, the steel material is produced with being conveyed
at a conveyance distance L
o (m) satisfying Equation (1), in one direction along with the longitudinal direction
of the steel material in the cooling apparatus.
Advantageous Effects of Invention
[0016] One aspect of the present invention can provide a method for producing a steel material
uniform in material properties in the longitudinal direction, an apparatus for cooling
a steel material, and a steel material.
Brief Description of Drawings
[0017]
FIG. 1 is a schematic view illustrating a cooling apparatus according to one embodiment
of the present invention;
FIG. 2 is a cross-section view illustrating each section of a rail;
FIG. 3 is a plan view illustrating peripheral equipment of the cooling apparatus;
FIG. 4A and FIG. 4B are schematic views illustrating a conveyance operation of the
cooling apparatus;
FIG. 5 is a plan view illustrating peripheral equipment of a cooling apparatus in
Examples; and
FIG. 6 is a schematic view illustrating a conveyance state on a discharge table in
Examples.
Description of Embodiments
[0018] In the following detailed description, many particular details are described so as
to provide a complete understanding of embodiments of the present invention. It, however,
will be apparent that one or more aspects can be carried out even without such particular
details. Additionally, well-known configurations and apparatuses are schematically
illustrated in order to simplify the drawings.
<Configuration of cooling apparatus>
[0019] First, an apparatus 2 for cooling a steel material according to one embodiment of
the present invention is described with reference to FIG. 1 to FIG. 3. Herein, a rail
1 is produced as a steel material in the present embodiment. The cooling apparatus
2 is used in a heat treatment step performed after a hot rolling step or a hot sawing
step described below, and forcedly cools a rail 1 having a high temperature. The rail
1, when viewed cross-sectionally perpendicular to the longitudinal direction, includes
a head section 11 and a foot section 13 which extend in the width direction and which
are opposite to each other in the vertical direction, and a web section 12 which connects
the head section 11 disposed above and the foot section 13 disposed below and which
extends in the vertical direction, as illustrated in FIG. 2.
[0020] As illustrated in FIG. 1, the cooling apparatus 2 includes head section-cooling headers
21a to 21c, a foot section-cooling header 22, a pair of clamps 23a and 23b, a thermometer
24 in the apparatus, and a conveyance section 25. The head section-cooling headers
21a to 21c, and the foot section-cooling header 22 serve as cooling sections for cooling
the rail 1, and a plurality of the respective headers are provided continuously side
by side in the y-axis direction serving as the longitudinal direction of the rail
1. In the following description, the head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c, and
the foot section-cooling header 22 are also collectively called cooling headers.
[0021] The head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c have coolant-spraying outlets arranged
at pitches of several mm to 100 mm, and the coolant-spraying outlets of each of the
head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c are provided oppositely on each of the head
top surface (end surface in the z-axis positive direction) and the head side surfaces
(both end surfaces in the x-axis positive direction) of the head section 11. The head
section-cooling headers 21a to 21c each spray a coolant supplied from a supply section
not illustrated, to the head top surface and the head side surface of the head section
11, thereby subjecting the head section 11 to forced cooling. The coolant to be used
is air, spray water, mist, or the like. Respective pressure measurement apparatuses
211a to 211c are also provided on coolant supply pathways of the head section-cooling
headers 21a to 21c, and the coolant spray pressure is monitored.
[0022] The foot section-cooling header 22 has coolant-spraying outlets arranged at pitches
of several mm to 100 mm, and the coolant-spraying outlets are provided opposite to
the lower surface (end surface in the z-axis negative direction) of the foot section
13. The foot section-cooling header 22 sprays a coolant supplied from a supply section
not illustrated, to the lower surface of the foot section 13, thereby subjecting the
foot section 13 to forced cooling, as in the head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c.
The coolant to be used is air, spray water, mist, or the like, as in the head section-cooling
headers 21a to 21c. A pressure apparatus 221 is also provided on a coolant supply
pathway of the foot section-cooling header 22, and the coolant spray pressure is monitored.
[0023] The head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c and the foot section-cooling header 22
each have the same length in the y-axis direction. The cooling headers are heated
from the rail 1 and thus thermally deformed, thereby causing warpage (the generation
mechanism of such warpage is described below) to be generated. The amount of warpage
of the cooling headers, generated at the same curvature, increases with the square
of the length of the cooling headers in the z-axis direction. Therefore, the length
of the cooling headers in the z-axis direction is preferably shorter. On the other
hand, an increase in the number of the cooling headers provided in the z-axis direction
for a decrease in the length of the cooling headers is not preferable because there
are required many feed ports of the coolant as well as many measurement devices and
control devices of the amount of coolant spray (for example, a pressure gauge, a flow
meter, and a flow regulator) which are mounted to the cooling headers and a pipe arrangement.
Accordingly, the length of the cooling headers in the z-axis direction is needed to
be a proper length, and is preferably 0.5 m or more and 4 m or less. The head section-cooling
headers 21a to 21c and the foot section-cooling header 22 provided side by side in
the y-axis direction are preferably provided as closer as possible so that any cooling
irregularity is not caused.
[0024] The pair of clamps 23a and 23b is an instrument for sandwiching each of both ends
of the foot section 13 in the x-axis direction to thereby support and restrain the
rail 1. The pair of clamps 23a and 23b is plurally provided over the entire length
in the longitudinal direction of the rail 1 with being several meters apart.
[0025] The thermometer 24 in the apparatus is a non-contact thermometer such as a radiation
thermometer, and measures the surface temperature of at least one point on the head
top surface of the head section 11.
[0026] The conveyance section 25 is a conveyance mechanism connected to the pair of clamps
23a and 23b, and is an apparatus that conveys the pair of clamps 23a and 23b in the
y-axis direction, thereby conveying the rail 1 in the cooling apparatus 2. The detail
of a conveyance operation of the conveyance section 25 is described below.
[0027] In the cooling apparatus 2 configured above, the amount of the coolant sprayed from
each of the head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c and the foot section-cooling header
22 is adjusted by a control section not illustrated. The control section here acquires
the temperature measurement result of the thermometer 24 in the apparatus, and the
amount sprayed is adjusted, as needed, based on the temperature measurement result
acquired.
[0028] As illustrated in FIG. 3, a carrying-in table 3 and a discharge table 4 are provided
on the periphery of the cooling apparatus 2. The carrying-in table 3 is a table that
conveys the rail 1 from a preceding step such as the hot rolling step to the cooling
apparatus 2. The discharge table 4 is a table that conveys the rail 1 heat-treated
in the cooling apparatus 2, to a next step such as a cooling bed or an examination
instrument. An exit side thermometer 5 is a non-contact thermometer that measures
the surface temperature of the head section 11 of the rail 1, as in the thermometer
24 in the apparatus, and that measures the temperature of the rail 1 discharged from
the cooling apparatus 2 after the heat treatment.
<Method for producing steel material>
[0029] Next, a method for producing a steel material according to the present embodiment
is described. In the present embodiment, a perlite-based rail 1 is produced as a steel
material. The rail 1 that can be used is, for example, steel including the following
chemical component composition. Herein, Equation by "%" with respect to each chemical
component means "% by mass", unless especially noted.
C: 0.60% or more and 1.05% or less
[0030] C (carbon) is an important element that forms cementite in a perlite-based rail,
resulting in increases in hardness and strength and enhancement in wear resistance.
If the C content is less than 0.60%, however, such effects are less exerted. The C
content is thus preferably 0. 60% or more, more preferably 0.70% or more. On the other
hand, if C is excessively contained, an increase in the amount of the cementite can
be achieved to result in increases in hardness and strength, but deterioration in
ductility is conversely caused. Moreover, an increase in the C content expands the
temperature range of the γ + θ region, and promotes softening of a welded heat affected
zone. In consideration of such adverse effects, the C content is preferably 1.05%
or less, more preferably 0.97% or less.
Si: 0.1% or more and 1.5% or less
[0031] Si (silicon) is added for enhancing a deoxidizer and a pearlite structure in a rail
material, but such an effect is less exerted if the content is less than 0.1%. Therefore,
the Si content is preferably 0.1% or more, more preferably 0.2% or more. On the other
hand, if Si is excessively contained, decarburization is promoted and generation of
surface defects of the rail 1 is promoted. Therefore, the Si content is preferably
1.5% or less, more preferably 1.3% or less.
Mn: 0.01% or more and 1.5% or less
[0032] Mn (manganese) has the effects of decreasing the temperature of perlite transformation
and finning the perlite lamellar spacing, and therefore is an element effective for
maintaining high hardness inside the rail 1. If the Mn content is less than 0.01%,
however, the effects are less exerted. Therefore, the Mn content is preferably 0.01%
or more, more preferably 0.3% or more. If the Mn content is more than 1.5%, the equilibrium
transformation temperature (TE) of perlite is lowered, and martensitic transformation
easily occurs in the structure. Therefore, the Mn content is preferably 1.5% or less,
more preferably 1.3% or less.
P: 0.035% or less
[0033] P (phosphorus) causes deterioration in toughness and ductility, if the content thereof
is more than 0.035%. Therefore, the P content is preferably made lower. Specifically,
the P content is preferably 0.035% or less, more preferably 0.025% or less. If special
refining or the like is here performed in order to decrease the P content as much
as possible, cost rise is caused in smelting. Therefore, the P content is preferably
0.001% or more.
S: 0.030% or less
[0034] S (sulfur) forms coarse MnS which extends in the rolling direction and which results
in deterioration in ductility and toughness. Therefore, the S content is preferably
made lower. Specifically, the S content is preferably 0.030% or less, more preferably
0.015% or less. If the S content is here decreased as much as possible, cost rise
in smelting is remarkably caused due to increases in smelting treatment time and the
amount of a solvent. Therefore, the S content is preferably 0.0005% or more.
Cr: 0.1% or more and 2.0% or less
[0035] Cr (chromium) increases the equilibrium transformation temperature (TE), contributes
to fining of the perlite lamellar spacing, and increases hardness and strength. Cr,
when used in combination with Sb, is also effective for inhibiting a decarburization
layer from being generated. Therefore, the Cr content is preferably 0.1% or more,
more preferably 0.2% or more. If the Cr content is more than 2.0%, not only the possibility
of the occurrence of welding defects is increased, but also hardenability is increased,
and generation of martensite is promoted. Therefore, the Cr content is preferably
2.0% or less, more preferably 1.5% or less.
[0036] The total content of Si and Cr is desirably 2.0% or less. The reason is because,
if the total content of Si and Cr is more than 2.0%, an excessive increase in scale
adhesiveness can inhibit scale peeling and promote decarburization.
Sb: 0.005% or more and 0.5% or less
[0037] Sb (antimony) has a remarkable effect of preventing decarburization during heating
of a rail steel material in a heating furnace. In particular, Sb is added together
with Cr, to thereby have the effect of reducing generation of a decarburization layer,
when the Sb content is 0.005% or more. Therefore, the Sb content is preferably 0.005%
or more, more preferably 0.01% or more. If the Sb content is more than 0.5%, the effect
is saturated. Therefore, the Sb content is preferably 0.5% or less, more preferably
0.3% or less.
[0038] The steel for use as the rail 1 may further contain, in addition to the chemical
composition, one or more elements of Cu: 0.01% or more and 1.0% or less, Ni: 0.01%
or more and 0.5% or less, Mo: 0.01% or more and 0.5% or less, V: 0.001% or more and
0.15% or less, and Nb: 0.001% or more and 0.030% or less.
Cu: 0.01% or more and 1.0% or less
[0039] Cu (copper) is an element that can provide much higher hardness by solid solution
strengthening. Cu also has the effect of suppressing decarburization. In order to
expect such an effect, the Cu content is preferably 0.01% or more, more preferably
0.05% or more. If the Cu content is more than 1.0%, surface cracking due to embrittlement
in continuous casting and/or rolling easily occurs. Therefore, the Cu content is preferably
1.0% or less, more preferably 0.6% or less.
Ni: 0.01% or more and 0.5% or less
[0040] Ni (nickel) is an element effective for enhancements in toughness and ductility.
Moreover, Ni is an element also effective for suppressing Cu cracking by addition
as a composite with Cu. Therefore, in the case where Cu is added, Ni is desirably
added, and the Ni content is more preferably 0.05% or more. If the Ni content is less
than 0.1%, however, such effects are not exerted. Therefore, the Ni content is preferably
0.01% or more. If the Ni content is more than 0.5%, hardenability is increased, and
generation of martensite is promoted. Therefore, the Ni content is preferably 0.5%
or less, more preferably 0.3% or less.
Mo: 0.01% or more and 0.5% or less
[0041] Mo (molybdenum) is an element effective for an increase in strength, but such an
effect is less exerted if the content is less than 0.01%. Therefore, the Mo content
is preferably 0.01% or more, more preferably 0.05% or more. If the Mo content is more
than 0.5%, an increase in hardenability causes martensite to be generated, resulting
in extreme deterioration in toughness and ductility. Therefore, the Mo content is
preferably 0.5% or less, more preferably 0.3% or less.
V: 0.001% or more and 0.15% or less
[0042] V (vanadium) is an element that forms VC, VN or the like and is finely precipitated
in ferrite, and that contributes to an increase in strength through precipitation
strengthening. V can also be expected to have the effects of serving as a trap site
of hydrogen and suppressing delayed fracture. In order to exert such effects, the
V content is preferably 0.001% or more, more preferably 0.005% or more. If V is added
in a rate of more than 0.15%, an increase in alloy cost is remarkable relative to
saturation of such effects. Therefore, the V content is preferably 0.15% or less,
more preferably 0.12% or less.
Nb: 0.001% or more and 0.030% or less
[0043] Nb (niobium) is effective for allowing the unrecrystallized temperature region of
austenite to be in a higher temperature region and promoting introduction of processing
strain into austenite in rolling, thereby fining the sizes of perlite colony and block.
Thus, Nb is an element effective for enhancements in ductility and toughness. In order
to exert such effects, the Nb content is preferably 0.001% or more, more preferably
0.003% or more. If the Nb content is more than 0.030%, Nb carbonitride is crystalized
in the course of solidification in casting of a rail steel material such as bloom,
resulting in deterioration in cleanliness. Therefore, the Nb content is preferably
0.030% or less, more preferably 0.025% or less.
[0044] The balance other than the above components is configured from Fe (iron) and inevitable
impurities. Up to 0.015% of N (nitrogen), up to 0.004% of O (oxygen), and up to 0.0003%
of H (hydrogen) can be allowed to be incorporated as such inevitable impurities. In
order to suppress deterioration in rolling fatigue characteristics due to hard AlN
and TiN, the Al content is desirably 0.001% or less and the Ti content is desirably
0.001% or less.
[0045] In a method for producing the rail 1 according to the present embodiment, first,
for example, the bloom of the chemical component composition, serving as the material
of the rail 1 cast by a continuous casting method, is carried in a heating furnace,
and heated to 1100°C or more.
[0046] Next, the bloom heated is rolled in each of a break-down roller, a rough roller and
a finish roller for one or more passes, and finally rolled to the rail 1 having a
shape illustrated in FIG. 2 (hot rolling step). The length in the longitudinal direction
of the rail 1 rolled is here about 50 m to 200 m, and is, if necessary, hot sawn so
as to have a length of, for example, 25 m (hot sawing step). A shorter length in the
longitudinal direction of the rail 1 here causes the subsequent heat treatment step
to be involuntarily affected by the coolant sprayed onto the end surface in the longitudinal
direction during cooling. Therefore, the length in the longitudinal direction of the
rail 1 for use in the heat treatment step is three times or more the height from the
head top surface of the head section 11 of the rail 1 to the lower surface of the
foot section 13 thereof. On the other hand, the upper limit of the length in the longitudinal
direction of the rail 1 for use in the heat treatment step is defined as the length
of rolling (the maximum rolling length in the hot rolling step).
[0047] The rail 1 hot rolled or hot sawn is conveyed to the cooling apparatus 2 by the carrying-in
table 3, and cooled in the cooling apparatus 2 (heat treatment step).
[0048] The temperature of the rail 1 here conveyed to the cooling apparatus 2 is desirably
in the austenite temperature region. A rail for use in mine or a curved section is
needed to have high hardness, and therefore rapid acceleration is needed in the cooling
apparatus 2 after rolling. Such acceleration is for fining the perlite lamellar spacing,
thereby providing a high-hardness structure, and an increase in the degree of supercooling
in transformation, namely, an increase in the cooling rate in transformation can provide
such a high-hardness structure. If the structure of the rail 1, however, is transformed
before cooling in the cooling apparatus 2, such transformation progresses at an extremely
low cooling rate in spontaneous cooling, and therefore cannot provide a high-hardness
structure. Accordingly, when the temperature of the rail 1 is equal to or lower than
the lowest temperature in the austenite temperature region at the start of cooling
in the cooling apparatus 2, the rail 1 is preferably reheated to any temperature in
the austenite temperature region and thereafter subjected to the heat treatment step.
[0049] In the heat treatment step, the rail 1 is conveyed to the cooling apparatus 2, and
thereafter the rail 1 is restrained by the clamps 23a and 23b. Thereafter, the rail
1 is rapidly cooled by spraying the coolant from each of the head section-cooling
headers 21a to 21c and the foot section-cooling header 22. The cooling rate in the
heat treatment is preferably changed depending on the desired hardness, and furthermore,
the cooling rate may be excessively increased, thereby causing martensitic transformation
to occur and impairing toughness. Therefore, the control section monitors the cooling
rate based on the result of the temperature measured by the thermometer 24 in the
apparatus during cooling, and changes the amount of the coolant to be sprayed. The
control section may also be here, if necessary, set so as to stop spraying of the
coolant and to perform cooling by spontaneous cooling.
[0050] In the heat treatment step, in the case where a plurality of the cooling headers
serving as the cooling sections of the cooling apparatus 2 have been provided in portions
in the longitudinal direction of the rail, temperature variation has occurred in the
longitudinal direction of the rail 1 in some cases. The present inventors have investigated
the cause for the occurrence of the temperature variation, and thus describe the investigation
result. The cooling headers may be close to the rail 1 in order to achieve a high
cooling rate in cooling of the rail 1 having a high temperature. In such a case, the
cooling headers are heated by radiation from the rail 1 and/or heat conduction of
air, and therefore thermally deformed. Only surfaces of the cooling headers, the surfaces
being closer to the steel material, are heated and thermally expended, and therefore,
the cooling headers are usually warped so that end portions thereof are away from
the rail 1. When the cooling headers are thus deformed, the end portions are away
from the rail 1 against the center portion of the cooling headers, thereby resulting
in a reduction in the cooling rate at the end portions as compared with the center
portion. Therefore, a strong cooling section and a weak cooling section are repeatedly
present in the longitudinal direction of the rail 1 at an interval where each of the
cooling headers is provided, thereby causing the temperature variation in the longitudinal
direction of the rail 1.
[0051] The present inventors have found that such temperature variation can be eliminated
by oscillating the rail 1 in the cooling apparatus 2 along with the longitudinal direction
of the rail 1 at a predetermined amplitude and conveying it. In other words, in the
heat treatment step of the present embodiment, the conveyance section 25 conveys the
clamps 23a and 23b together with the rail 1 restrained, with oscillation at a predetermined
amplitude, in cooling. Such oscillation here means an operation that conveys the rail
1 alternately in the y-axis positive direction and in the y-axis negative direction
by a predetermined conveyance distance L
o. The conveyance distance L
o serving as the amplitude of oscillation corresponds to the distance (m) satisfying
the following Equation (1). In Equation (1), m represents a natural number, and L
h represents the length (m) of the cooling headers, being the length of the cooling
sections in the longitudinal direction of the rail 1 (y-axis direction), respectively.

[0052] The conveyance operation of the rail 1 by the conveyance section 25 is described
with reference to FIG. 4. In the example illustrated in FIG. 4, the conveyance distance
L
o in the heat treatment step is a length twice the length L
h of the cooling headers (head section-cooling header 21a and foot section-cooling
header 22) serving as the cooling sections. The conveyance section 25 then conveys
the rail 1 in the state illustrated in FIG. 4A at the conveyance distance L
o in the y-axis negative direction. Thus, the rail 1 is in the state illustrated in
FIG. 4B from the state illustrated in FIG. 4A. Next, the conveyance section 25 conveys
the rail 1 in the state illustrated in FIG. 4B at the conveyance distance L
o in the y-axis positive direction. Thus, the rail 1 is again in the state illustrated
in FIG. 4A from the state illustrated in FIG. 4B. Such operations are repeated to
perform the conveyance operation.
[0053] Furthermore, the conveyance operation of the rail 1 in the cooling apparatus 2 by
the conveyance section 25 is preferably performed continuously during cooling of the
rail 1. In other words, when the cooling time of the rail 1 in the heat treatment
step is defined as T (min), the conveyance velocity V (mm/min) of the rail 1 is set
so that a relationship of Equation (2) is satisfied. In Equation (2), n represents
a natural number.

[0054] Furthermore, cooling is performed in the heat treatment step until a final structure
made of 100% of perlite, or a final structure having 5% or less of pro-eutectoid ferrite
and pro-eutectoid cementite and the balance being perlite or a final structure where
perlite and bainite are mixed is obtained. The bainite phase and the cementite phase
are impaired in toughness, therefore a structure made of 100% of the perlite phase
is preferable in order not to generate any failures caused by deterioration in toughness,
such as sharing, and a final structure is determined depending on the intended use.
[0055] As described above, a high-hardness structure is obtained by allowing transformation
to occur in the heat treatment, and therefore the heat treatment completion temperature
is needed to be achieved after completion of transformation. While the depth necessary
for such a high-hardness structure, however, varies depending on the intended use
of the rail 1 and the heat treatment completion temperature cannot be thus clearly
limited, cooling is needed to be performed at least until the temperature of the surface
of the head section 11 reaches 650°C or less.
[0056] After the heat treatment step, the rail 1 is conveyed to the cooling bed by the discharge
table 4, and is cooled thereon to a temperature ranging from room temperature to 100°C.
Thereafter, the rail 1 is straightened by roller straightening in order to decrease
warpage. The rail 1 then undergoes an examination and thereafter is shipped. Since
a section non-straightened is generated at an end in the longitudinal direction of
the rail 1 in straightening by roller straightening, cold sawing may also be performed
after straightening by roller straightening, without sawing to the length of a final
product in hot sawing. The end in the longitudinal direction of the rail 1, in cold
sawing, here corresponds to each of both ends in the rolling length, and therefore
any section not-straightened is decreased and warpage is decreased.
[0057] A rail 1 uniform in material properties in the longitudinal direction can be produced
through the above steps.
<Modifications>
[0058] Although the present invention is described above with reference to particular embodiments,
the present invention is not intended to be limited by such description. Not only
various modifications of the embodiments disclosed, but also other embodiments of
the present invention are also apparent to those skilled in the art with reference
to the detailed description of the present invention. Accordingly, it is to be understood
that claims also cover such modifications or embodiments encompassed in the scope
and gist of the present invention.
[0059] For example, the rail 1 is used as the steel material in the embodiment, but the
present invention is not limited to such an embodiment. For example, the steel material
to be produced may be any other steel material product such as a thick plate or a
shaped steel. In such a case, the chemical component composition of the steel material
product, the configuration of the cooling apparatus 2, and the like are not limited
to the cases of the embodiments. Even when the steel material to be produced is the
rail 1, any steel having a different chemical component composition from that in the
embodiment may be used. As described above, an end surface is involuntarily affected
by the coolant sprayed, during cooling, and therefore the minimum length in the longitudinal
direction of the steel material product is three times or more the thickness of the
thickest portion of a steel material such as a shaped steel, or three times or more
the thickness of a plate material representative of a thick plate, and the maximum
length thereof is the rolling length.
[0060] While the conveyance distance L
o satisfies Equation (1) in the embodiment, the conveyance distance L
o is preferably a value closer to the integral multiple of the length L of the cooling
sections, and preferably satisfies the following Equation (3).

[0061] Thus, the variation in cooling rate, caused in each header unit of the cooling sections,
can be more decreased.
[0062] While the conveyance section 25 conveys the rail 1 with the rail 1 being oscillated
in the heat treatment step in the embodiment, the present invention is not limited
to such an embodiment. For example, the conveyance section 25 may be configured so
as to convey the rail 1 at the conveyance distance L
o in only any one direction of the y-axis positive direction and the y-axis negative
direction with the rail 1 being not oscillated.
[0063] While the conveyance operation of the rail 1 in the cooling apparatus 2 by the conveyance
section 25 in the heat treatment step is continuously performed during cooling of
the rail 1 in the embodiment, the present invention is not limited to such an embodiment.
For example, the conveyance operation of the rail 1 in the embodiment may be performed
for a time more than half of the cooling time T, after cooling of the rail 1. The
conveyance operation is here performed at the conveyance distance L
o satisfying Equation (1), for a predetermined time (time more than half of the cooling
time T) from the start of cooling of the rail 1. Thereafter, the conveyance operation
is preferably continuously performed for the remaining time of the cooling time T,
but the conveyance distance L
o does not necessarily satisfy Equation (1). Thus, the time for which uniform cooling
can be made can be at least half of the heat treatment time, thereby decreasing the
variation in cooling rate. In such a case, the conveyance velocity V does not necessarily
satisfy Equation (2), and therefore application to a cooling apparatus 2 that cannot
be changed in the conveyance velocity V can also be made.
<Effects of embodiment>
[0064]
- (1) In a method for producing a steel material according to one aspect of the present
invention, when a cooling apparatus 2 having a plurality of cooling sections (head
section-cooling headers 21a to 21c, and a foot section-cooling header 22) disposed
side by side in the longitudinal direction of a steel material cools a steel material
hot worked or cooled/reheated, the steel material is conveyed at the conveyance distance
Lo (m) satisfying Equation (1), in the longitudinal direction of the steel material,
in the cooling apparatus 2.
While the steel material is needed to be cooled at a high cooling rate in order to
provide a high-hardness steel material, as described above, the cooling headers of
the cooling apparatus 2 are needed therefor to be cooled with being closer to the
steel material. The cooling headers are here heated by radiation or the like from
the steel material, and the cooling headers are deformed so as to be warped in the
longitudinal direction. If cooling is performed in such a state, the difference in
distance from the steel material is caused in the longitudinal direction of the cooling
headers, and thus the variation in the cooling rate (in a strong cooling section and
a weak cooling section) is caused in each cooling header unit, resulting in the occurrence
of the variation in hardness of the steel material. For example, in production of
the rail 1 as the steel material, the rail 1 may be usually cooled with being oscillated
at a lower amplitude than that in the embodiment, in the longitudinal direction. The
cooling rate is here higher at a position immediately below each coolant-spraying
outlet and lower at a position away from the position immediately below each coolant-spraying
outlet, and therefore the rail can be at least conveyed at a distance (several mm
to 100 mm) between coolant-spraying outlets, thereby uniformly passing through the
position immediately below each coolant-spraying outlet, higher in the cooling rate,
and the position away therefrom, lower in the cooling rate. Such conventional oscillation
(conveyance operation), however, has not be able to eliminate cooling irregularity
caused in each cooling header unit.
On the other hand, the above configuration can allow the steel material to be conveyed
at a distance substantially integral multiple of the length Lh of the cooling headers in the longitudinal direction during cooling, thereby allowing
respective times, at which the steel material passes through the strong cooling section
and the weak cooling section, to be the same at each position in a region corresponding
to the conveyance distance Lo in the longitudinal direction of the steel material. Therefore, the variation in
cooling rate, caused in each cooling header unit, can be decreased, thereby allowing
a steel material uniform in material properties such as hardness in the longitudinal
direction to be obtained. Furthermore, the distance between the cooling headers and
the steel material can be shorter, and therefore a high cooling rate can be achieved
and the steel material can have high hardness.
- (2) In conveyance of the steel material in configuration (1) above, the steel material
is conveyed with being oscillated, and the amplitude of such oscillation is set at
the conveyance distance Lo satisfying Equation (1).
Such a configuration can allow a long total conveyance distance to be achieved even
in the case where the length of the cooling apparatus does not have sufficient margin
relative to the length in the longitudinal direction of the steel material.
- (3) In configuration (1) or (2), the steel material is a rail material.
Such a configuration can allow a rail material less in the variation in material properties
in the longitudinal direction to be obtained as a rail material being a long steel
material. For example, when the rail material is a high-hardness rail 1, the variation
in cooling in the heat treatment step can be suppressed within 20°C or less, and as
a result, the variation in hardness can be suppressed within an HV of 13 or less at
a depth position of 1 mm from the surface and within an HV of 10 or less at a depth
position of 5 mm therefrom.
- (4) An apparatus 2 for cooling a steel material according to one aspect of the present
invention is a cooling apparatus 2 for cooling a steel material hot worked or cooled/reheated,
including a plurality of cooling sections (head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c,
and a foot section-cooling header 22) disposed side by side in the longitudinal direction
of the steel material, and a conveyance section 25 that conveys the steel material
at the conveyance distance Lo (m) satisfying Equation (1), in the longitudinal direction of the steel material
in the cooling apparatus 2, during cooling of the steel material in the cooling sections.
Such a configuration can allow the same effect as in configuration (1) above to be
obtained.
- (5) A steel material according to one aspect of the present invention is a steel material
produced by hot working or cooling/reheating and thereafter cooling in a cooling apparatus
2 having a plurality of cooling sections (head section-cooling headers 21a to 21c,
and a foot section-cooling header 22) disposed side by side in the longitudinal direction,
wherein, during cooling in the cooling apparatus 2, the steel material is produced
with being conveyed at the conveyance distance Lo (m) satisfying Equation (1), in one direction along with the longitudinal direction
of the steel material in the cooling apparatus 2.
Such a configuration can allow the steel material to be uniformly cooled in the longitudinal
direction, thereby providing a steel material uniform in material properties in the
longitudinal direction.
Example 1
[0065] Next, Example 1 performed by the inventors is described. First, before Example 1,
a rail 1 being a steel material was produced in a different conveyance distance L
o condition from the embodiment, as Conventional Examples, and the material properties
thereof were evaluated.
[0066] In Conventional Examples, first, bloom of a chemical component composition in Condition
A represented in Table 1 was cast by using a continuous casting method. The balance
of the chemical component composition of the bloom was here substantially Fe, specifically
Fe and inevitable impurities.
[Table 1]
Condition |
Chemical component composition (% by mass) |
C |
Si |
Mn |
P |
S |
Al |
Ti |
A |
0.83 |
0.52 |
0.51 |
0.015 |
0.008 |
0.0005 |
0.001 |
B |
0.83 |
0.52 |
1.11 |
0.015 |
0.008 |
0.0005 |
0.001 |
C |
1.03 |
0.52 |
1.11 |
0.015 |
0.008 |
0.0005 |
0.001 |
[0067] Next, the bloom cast was reheated to 1100°C or more in a heating furnace, thereafter
taken out from the heating furnace, and hot rolled through a break-down roller, a
rough roller and a finish roller so that the cross-sectional shape was the final shape
(rail shape illustrated in FIG. 2). In such hot rolling, the rail 1 was rolled at
an inverted position where a head section 11 and a foot section 13 were in contact
with a conveyance stage.
[0068] Furthermore, the rail 1 hot rolled was conveyed to a cooling apparatus 2, and the
rail 1 was cooled (heat treatment step). Since the rail 1 was here rolled at the inverted
position as a rolling position, the rail 1, when carried in the cooling apparatus
2, was inverted, and was allowed to be at an erect position illustrated in FIG. 2,
where the foot section 13 was located below in the vertical direction and the head
section 11 was located above in the vertical direction, and the rail 1 was restrained
by clamps 23a and 23b. Cooling was then performed by spraying of a coolant from each
cooling header. During such cooling, the coolant was air, and the distance between
the cooling headers and the rail was 20 mm or 50 mm. As disclosed in PTL 1, the spray
pressure of the coolant was set at 1.3 kPa to 130 kPa so that the cooling rate at
670°C to 770°C at a depth position of 5 mm from the surface layer was 3°C/sec to 7°C/sec,
and cooling was performed until the surface temperature of the head section 11 reached
530°C or less, while temperature measurement was performed by a thermometer 24 in
the apparatus.
[0069] During cooling in the cooling apparatus 2, such cooling was performed in a condition
where the rail 1 was not conveyed at all and in a condition where the rail 1 was conveyed
at a conveyance distance L
o of 1 m, in Conventional Examples. The length L
h of the cooling headers was 4 m, and the rail 1 was conveyed at only a total distance
of 4 m with being oscillated in the cooling apparatus 2, in the condition where the
rail 1 was conveyed.
[0070] After completion of the heat treatment, the rail 1 was taken out from the cooling
apparatus 2 onto a discharge table 4, and the surface temperature of the head section
11 of the rail 1 after cooling was measured by use of an exit side thermometer 5 provided
on the discharge table 4 as illustrated in FIG. 5 and FIG. 6. The exit side thermometer
5 was here used to measure the temperature at a plurality of positions over the entire
length in the longitudinal direction of the rail 1, and the variation in temperature
after cooling was calculated from the maximum value and the minimum value of the measurement
results.
[0071] Thereafter, the rail 1 was conveyed to a cooling bed and cooled in the cooling bed
until the temperature reached room temperature to 100°C, and thereafter straightening
was performed by a roller straightening machine to produce a rail 1 being a final
product. Thereafter, the rail 1 produced was cold sawn to thereby take a sample, and
the hardness of the sample taken was measured. The sample was here taken at a pitch
of 1 m relative to the total length of the rail 1, and the Vickers hardness test was
performed as hardness measurement at depth positions of 1 mm and 5 mm from the surface
at the center in the width direction of the head section 11 of the rail 1.
[0072] The cooling conditions and the evaluation results of material properties in Conventional
Examples are represented in Table 2. In Conventional Examples 1 to 3 where the distance
between the cooling headers and the rail was 50 mm, the variation in temperature in
the entire length was within 20°C and the variation in hardness at each position where
the sample was taken was also within an HV of 20 at a depth of 1 mm and within an
HV of 10 at a depth of 5 mm. In Conventional Examples 4 to 9 where the distance between
the headers and the rail was 20 mm, the variation in temperature in the entire length
was within 120°C, the variation in hardness was within an HV of 120 at a depth of
1 mm and within an HV of 60 at a depth of 5 mm, and material properties were confirmed
not to be uniform. The reason for this was considered because, in the case where the
distance between the cooling headers and the rail was 50 mm, the influence of radiation
from the rail 1 was smaller and therefore the amount of warpage of the cooling headers
was smaller, and the variations in temperature and hardness were smaller. On the other
hand, it was considered with respect to the condition where the distance between the
cooling headers and the rail was 20 mm that the cooling headers were heated by radiation
of the rail 1 and thus the cooling headers were thermally deformed considerably, and
therefore the variations in temperature and hardness were larger.
[0073] In the case where the distance between the cooling headers and the rail was 50 mm,
however, a high pressure of 130 kPa exceeding 1 atm was required when the cooling
rate is 7°C/sec in order to obtain a high-hardness structure. Therefore, such a case
is not preferable in terms of facility cost and energy cost. It is confirmed from
the foregoing that material properties uniform in the longitudinal direction were
difficult to obtain, while a high cooling rate was obtained, in the conditions of
Conventional Examples 1 to 9.
[Table 2]
Condition |
Component |
Colling header length Lh [m] |
Conveyance distance [m] |
Coolant |
Distance between cooling headers and rail [mm] |
Spray pressure [kPa] |
Target cooling rate at 5 mm depth position [°C/sec] |
Variation in temperature after completion of heat treatment (Maximum - Minimum) [°C] |
Hardness at 1 mm depth position |
Hardness at 5 mm depth position |
Average Maximum |
Minimum |
Average |
Maximum |
Minimum |
[HV] |
[HV] |
[HV] |
[HV] |
[HV] |
[HV] |
Conventional Example 1 |
A |
4 |
0 |
Air |
50 |
130 |
7 |
20 |
393 |
400 |
387 |
375 |
380 |
370 |
Conventional Example 2 |
A |
4 |
0 |
Air |
50 |
30 |
5 |
15 |
375 |
380 |
370 |
356 |
360 |
353 |
Conventional Example 3 |
A |
4 |
0 |
Air |
50 |
5 |
3 |
10 |
357 |
360 |
353 |
338 |
340 |
335 |
Conventional Example 4 |
A |
4 |
0 |
Air |
20 |
30 |
7 |
120 |
360 |
400 |
320 |
350 |
380 |
320 |
Conventional Example 5 |
A |
4 |
0 |
Air |
20 |
7 |
5 |
110 |
343 |
380 |
307 |
333 |
360 |
305 |
Conventional Example 6 |
A |
4 |
0 |
Air |
20 |
1.3 |
3 |
100 |
327 |
360 |
293 |
315 |
340 |
290 |
Conventional Example 7 |
A |
4 |
1 |
Air |
20 |
30 |
7 |
80 |
373 |
400 |
347 |
360 |
380 |
340 |
Conventional Example 8 |
A |
4 |
1 |
Air |
20 |
7 |
5 |
60 |
360 |
380 |
340 |
345 |
360 |
330 |
Conventional Example 9 |
A |
4 |
1 |
Air |
20 |
1.3 |
3 |
40 |
347 |
360 |
333 |
330 |
340 |
320 |
[0074] Next, a rail 1 was produced by the inventors in a condition where the conveyance
distance L
o of the embodiment was adopted, as Example 1, and the material properties thereof
were evaluated.
[0075] In Example 1, first, bloom of each of chemical component compositions with respect
to A to C represented in Table 1 was cast by using a continuous casting method. Herein,
the balance of the chemical component composition of the bloom was substantially Fe,
and specifically Fe and inevitable impurities.
[0076] Next, the bloom cast was reheated to 1100°C or more in a heating furnace, and thereafter
taken out from the heating furnace and hot rolled through a break-down roller, a rough
roller and a finish roller so that the cross-sectional shape was the final shape,
in the same manner as in Conventional Examples. In the hot rolling, the rail 1 was
rolled at an inverted position where the head section 11 and the foot section 13 were
in contact with a conveyance stage.
[0077] Furthermore, the rail 1 hot rolled was conveyed to the cooling apparatus 2, and the
rail 1 was cooled in the same manner as in the embodiment (heat treatment step). Since
the rail 1 was here rolled at the inverted position as a rolling position, the rail
1, when carried in the cooling apparatus 2, was inverted, and was allowed to be at
an erect position illustrated in FIG. 2, where the foot section 13 was located below
in the vertical direction and the head section 11 was located above in the vertical
direction, and the rail 1 was restrained by clamps 23a and 23b. Cooling was then performed
by spraying of a coolant from each cooling header. During such cooling, the coolant
was any of air, mist or spray water, and the distance between the cooling headers
and the rail was 20 mm. When the coolant was air, the spray pressure of the coolant
was 5 kPa to 50 kPa, and when the coolant was mist or spray water, 15% of a spray
outlet was changed to a mist nozzle or a spray nozzle, and the coolant was sprayed
through such a nozzle at a spray pressure of 500 kPa or 300 kPa. When the coolant
was mist or spray water, air was sprayed through 85% of the remaining outlet, and
the pressure of air was 30 kPa. Cooling was performed with the spray pressure of the
coolant being changed depending on the condition in the heat treatment step. Furthermore,
cooling was performed in the heat treatment step until the surface temperature of
the head section 11 reached 530°C or less, while temperature measurement was performed
by the thermometer 24 in the apparatus, in the same manner as in Conventional Examples.
[0078] Furthermore, cooling was performed in the heat treatment step in conditions of the
length L
h of the cooling headers, where the conveyance distance L
o and the total conveyance distance (m) serving as the total distance of conveyance
in cooling were changed within the scope of the embodiment.
[0079] After completion of the heat treatment, the rail 1 was taken out from the cooling
apparatus 2 onto the discharge table 4, and the surface temperature of the head section
11 of the rail 1 after cooling was measured by use of the exit side thermometer 5
provided on the discharge table 4, as illustrated in FIG. 5 and FIG. 6. The exit side
thermometer 5 was here used to measure the temperature at a plurality of positions
over the entire length in the longitudinal direction of the rail 1, and the variation
in temperature after cooling was calculated from the maximum value and the minimum
value of the measurement results.
[0080] Thereafter, the rail 1 was conveyed to a cooling bed and cooled in the cooling bed
until the temperature reached room temperature to 100°C, and thereafter straightening
was performed by a roller straightening machine to produce a rail 1 being a final
product. Thereafter, the rail 1 produced was cold sawn to thereby take a sample, and
the hardness of the sample taken was measured. Herein, the sample was taken at a pitch
of 1 m relative to the total length of the rail 1, and the Vickers hardness test was
performed as hardness measurement at depth positions of 1 mm and 5 mm from the surface
at the center in the width direction of the head section 11 of the rail 1.
[0081] The same manner was also conducted in Comparative Example 1 where the condition of
the conveyance distance L
o was different from that of the embodiment, for comparison with Example 1, and material
properties of a rail 1 produced were evaluated.
[0082] The cooling conditions and the evaluation results of material properties in Example
1 and Comparative Example 1 are represented in Table 3. In Table 3, the pressure as
the spray pressure condition of the coolant in Example 1-14 was changed from 10 to
30 at a position of 1/3 of the total conveyance distance, and the pressure as the
spray pressure condition of the coolant in Example 1-15 was changed from 30 to 10
at a position of 1/3 of the total conveyance distance and the spray pressure was changed
from 10 to 30 at a position of 2/3 of the total conveyance distance. While the conveyance
distance L
o was set to 4 m in the condition of Comparative Example 1-3, conveyance was made by
only up to 3.0 m during cooling of the rail 1, and while the conveyance distance L
o was set to 2 m in the condition of Comparative Example 1-4, conveyance was made by
only up to 1.0 m during cooling of the rail 1.
[0083] The variation in temperature in the entire length was within 20°C in the conditions
of Examples 1-1 to 1-17, and the variation in temperature in the entire length was
smaller and was within 5°C in the condition where the oscillation distance L
o was n times the cooling header length L
h. The variation in temperature, however, was within 20°C or more in the condition
where the oscillation distance L
o indicated in Comparative Examples 1-1 to 1-4 was shorter than the cooling header
length L
h or in the condition where the total conveyance distance in the heat treatment was
less than the cooling header length L
h.
[Table 3]
Condition |
Component |
Cooling header length Lh [m] |
Conveyance distance Lo [m] |
Total conveyance distance [m] |
Coolant |
Spray pressure [kPa] |
Variation in temperature after completion of heat treatment (Maximum - Minimum) [°C] |
Hardness at 1 mm depth position |
Hardness at 5 mm depth position |
Average [HV] |
Maximum [HV] |
Minimum [HV] |
Average [HV] |
Maximum [HV] |
Minimum [HV] |
Example 1-1 |
A |
0.5 |
0.5 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
3 |
405 |
406 |
404 |
385 |
386 |
385 |
Example 1-2 |
A |
1 |
1 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
3 |
400 |
401 |
399 |
380 |
381 |
380 |
Example 1-3 |
A |
2 |
2 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
4 |
390 |
391 |
388 |
370 |
371 |
369 |
Example 1-4 |
A |
4 |
4 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
5 |
360 |
362 |
359 |
350 |
351 |
349 |
Example 1-5 |
A |
2 |
4 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
4 |
390 |
391 |
388 |
370 |
371 |
369 |
Example 1-6 |
A |
2 |
8 |
8.0 |
Air |
30 |
4 |
390 |
391 |
388 |
370 |
371 |
369 |
Example 1-7 |
A |
2 |
2 |
2.0 |
Air |
30 |
4 |
390 |
391 |
388 |
370 |
371 |
369 |
Example 1-8 |
A |
2 |
2 |
5.0 |
Air |
30 |
17 |
385 |
391 |
380 |
367 |
371 |
363 |
Example 1-9 |
A |
2 |
2 |
2.5 |
Air |
30 |
9 |
388 |
391 |
385 |
369 |
371 |
367 |
Example 1-10 |
B |
1 |
1 |
3.0 |
Air |
30 |
19 |
434 |
440 |
427 |
415 |
420 |
411 |
Example 1-11 |
C |
1 |
1 |
5.0 |
Air |
30 |
19 |
444 |
450 |
437 |
425 |
430 |
421 |
Example 1-12 |
A |
2 |
2 |
6.0 |
Air |
5 |
4 |
370 |
371 |
368 |
350 |
351 |
349 |
Example 1-13 |
A |
2 |
2 |
8.0 |
Air |
50 |
4 |
410 |
411 |
408 |
390 |
391 |
389 |
Example 1-14 |
A |
2 |
2 |
10.0 |
Air |
10→30 |
4 |
375 |
376 |
373 |
370 |
371 |
369 |
Example 1-15 |
A |
2 |
2 |
12.0 |
Air |
30→10→30 |
4 |
395 |
396 |
393 |
390 |
391 |
389 |
Example 1-16 |
A |
4 |
4 |
8.0 |
Mist |
500 |
4 |
450 |
451 |
448 |
430 |
431 |
429 |
Example 1-17 |
A |
4 |
4 |
8.0 |
Spray water |
300 |
4 |
450 |
451 |
448 |
430 |
431 |
429 |
Comparative Example1-1 |
A |
4 |
1 |
8.0 |
Air |
30 |
80 |
344 |
371 |
318 |
331 |
351 |
311 |
Comparative Example 1-2 |
A |
2 |
1 |
8.0 |
Air |
30 |
40 |
378 |
391 |
364 |
361 |
371 |
351 |
Comparative Example 1-3 |
A |
4 |
4 |
3.0 |
Air |
30 |
35 |
359 |
371 |
348 |
342 |
351 |
334 |
Comparative Example 1-4 |
A |
2 |
2 |
1.0 |
Air |
30 |
25 |
383 |
391 |
374 |
365 |
371 |
359 |
[0084] It was confirmed from the evaluation results of material properties that the variation
in temperature was suppressed within 20°C or less, and the variation in hardness was
an HV of 13 or less at a depth position of 1 mm from the surface and an HV of 10 or
less at a depth position of 5 mm therefrom in the conditions of Examples 1-1 to 1-17.
On the other hand, the variation in temperature was not suppressed within 20°C or
less, and the variation in hardness was as large as an HV of 15 or more at a depth
position of 1 mm from the surface and as large as an HV of 13 or more at a depth position
of 5 mm therefrom in the conditions of Comparative Examples 1-1 to 1-4.
[0085] In comparison of the conditions indicated in Examples 1-1 to 1-9 where Component
A was adopted, the spray pressure was constant and 30 kPa and the coolant was air,
it was confirmed that the average hardness was as very high as an HV of 391 or more
at a depth position of 1 mm and was as very high as an HV of 367 or more at a depth
position of 5 mm in the condition where the cooling header length L
h was 3 m or less. The average hardness, however, was as low as an HV of 398 at a depth
position of 1 mm and as low as an HV of 379 at a depth position of 5 mm, while the
variation in hardness could be reduced, in the condition where the cooling header
length L
h was 4 m, as compared with the condition where the cooling header length L
h was shorter.
[0086] It could also be confirmed in Examples 1-10 and 1-11 where the component was changed,
in Examples 1-12 and 1-13 where the spray pressure was changed, and in Examples 1-14
and 1-15 where the spray pressure was changed halfway that the variations in temperature
and hardness were reduced as in Examples 1-1 to 1-9. The average cooling rate in cooling
was 4°C/sec in Example 1-12 where the spray pressure was the lowest, and the average
cooling rate in cooling was 8.5°C/sec in Example 1-13 where the spray pressure was
the highest. Therefore, it has been able to be confirmed that, when the coolant is
air, the effects of the present invention can be exerted at least in the range from
4°C/sec to 8.5°C/sec. It was also confirmed that the variations in temperature and
hardness were smaller, furthermore the average hardness at a depth position of 1 mm
was an HV of 479 and the average hardness at a depth position of 5 mm was an HV of
459, and the hardness was thus very high regardless of a long cooling header length
L
h of 4 m, in Examples 1-16 and 1-17 where the coolant was spray water or mist.
Example 2
[0087] Next, Example 2 performed by the inventors is described. In Example 2, bloom of a
different chemical component composition from that in Example 1 was used to produce
a rail 1 in the same manner as in Example 1 in the condition where the conveyance
distance L
o in the embodiment was adopted, and material properties of the rail 1 were evaluated.
In Example 2, first, bloom of each chemical component composition of Conditions D
to F represented in Table 4 was cast by using a continuous casting method. The balance
of the chemical component composition of the bloom was here substantially Fe, specifically
Fe and inevitable impurities.
[Table 4]
Condition |
Chemical component composition (% by mass) |
C |
Si |
Mn |
P |
S |
Cr |
Sb |
Al |
Ti |
Others |
D |
0.84 |
0.54 |
0.55 |
0.018 |
0.004 |
0.784 |
- |
- |
0.002 |
V: 0.058 |
E |
0.82 |
0.23 |
1.26 |
0.018 |
0.005 |
0.155 |
0.0360 |
0.0001 |
0.001 |
|
F |
0.83 |
0.66 |
0.26 |
0.015 |
0.005 |
0.896 |
0.1200 |
0.0005 |
0.001 |
Cu: 0.11, Ni: 0.12, Mo: 0.11 |
G |
0.82 |
0.55 |
1.13 |
0.012 |
0.002 |
0.224 |
- |
- |
- |
Nb: 0.009 |
[0088] Next, the bloom cast was reheated to 1100°C or more in a heating furnace, thereafter
hot rolled, and subsequently cooled (heat treatment step) in the same manner as in
Example 1 described above. Measurement of the surface temperature of the rail 1 and
cooling in the cooling bed after completion of the heat treatment, and furthermore
straightening with a roller straightening machine, sampling and hardness measurement
were also in the same conditions as in Example 1. The same manner was also conducted
in Comparative Example 2 where the condition of the conveyance distance L
o was different from that of the embodiment, for comparison with Example 2, and material
properties of a rail 1 produced were evaluated.
[0089] The cooling conditions and the evaluation results of material properties in Example
2 and Comparative Example 2 are represented in Table 5.
[Table 5]
Condition |
Component |
Cooling header length Lh [m] |
Conveyance distance Lo [m] |
Total conveyance distance [m] |
Coolants |
Spray pressure [kPa] |
Variation in temperature after completion of heat treatment (Maximum - Minimum) [°C] |
Hardness at 1 mm depth position |
Hardness at 5 mm depth position |
Average [HV] |
Maximum [HV] |
Minimum [HV] |
Average [HV] |
Maximum [HV] |
Minimum [HV] |
Example 2-1 |
D |
2 |
2 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
4 |
479 |
480 |
478 |
409 |
410 |
409 |
Example 2-2 |
E |
1 |
1 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
3 |
406 |
407 |
405 |
474 |
475 |
474 |
Example 2-3 |
F |
4 |
4 |
4.0 |
Air |
30 |
5 |
415 |
416 |
414 |
378 |
379 |
378 |
Example 2-4 |
G |
2 |
8 |
8.0 |
Air |
30 |
4 |
430 |
431 |
429 |
383 |
384 |
382 |
Comparative Example 2-1 |
D |
4 |
1 |
8.0 |
Air |
30 |
81 |
481 |
508 |
455 |
410 |
430 |
390 |
Comparative Example 2-2 |
G |
2 |
1 |
8.0 |
Air |
30 |
39 |
432 |
455 |
409 |
382 |
392 |
372 |
[0090] The conveyance distance L
o was n times the cooling header length L
h in the conditions of Examples 2-1 to 2-4, and therefore the variation in temperature
in the entire length was within 5°C and was smaller. As a result, it was confirmed
that the variation in hardness was an HV of 2 or less at a depth position of 1 mm
from the surface and an HV of 2 at a depth position of 5 mm therefrom in the conditions
of Examples 2-1 to 2-4.
[0091] On the other hand, it was confirmed that the variation in temperature was not suppressed
within 20°C or less, and the variation in hardness was as large as an HV of 40 or
more at a depth position of 1 mm from the surface and as large as an HV of 20 or more
at a depth position of 5 mm therefrom, in the conditions indicated in Comparative
Example 2-1 to 2-2 where the oscillation distance L
o was shorter than the cooling header length L
h.
Reference Signs List
[0092]
1 rail
11 head section
12 web section
13 foot section
2 cooling apparatus
21a to 21c head section-cooling header
22 foot section-cooling header
23a, 23b clamp
24 thermometer in apparatus
25 conveyance section
3 carrying-in table
4 discharge table
5 exit side thermometer