Zhihao Feng , Kaimin Wei , Tianyu Wang , Qian Feng , Sijie Wang , Lishi Jiao , Jing Ma , Dezhong Meng , Jianhui Li
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
This study investigated the effects of laser gas nitriding treatment on the Ti-20Zr-6.5Al-4V alloy using a closed IPG quasi-continuous laser. Various analytical techniques were employed to assess the phase composition, microstructural morphology and elemental distribution of the nitrided zone and the matrix at different scanning speeds (10 mm/s, 15 mm/s and 25 mm/s) when the laser power was 150 W. Additionally, vacuum friction and wear behavior were evaluated. The results indicate that following laser nitriding, the structure of the nitrided surface primarily comprises nitride dendrites and fine α grains. Element distribution tests confirmed that the nitrides present on the surface are predominantly Ti(Zr)xNy. Furthermore, as the scanning speed decreases, the hardness of the laser nitride layer progressively increases, with the maximum microhardness observed at a scanning speed of 10 mm/s, approximately 871 HV0.5. The vacuum friction and wear results demonstrate that at a scanning speed of 10 mm/s, the COF value of the sample is only 0.337. Analysis suggests that laser nitriding treatment effectively refines the surface grains and generates hard nitrides, thereby enhancing the hardness and wear resistance of the alloy. Further analysis confirmed that the wear of the nitride layer primarily occurs through adhesive and abrasive mechanisms.
期刊介绍:
Surface and Coatings Technology is an international archival journal publishing scientific papers on significant developments in surface and interface engineering to modify and improve the surface properties of materials for protection in demanding contact conditions or aggressive environments, or for enhanced functional performance. Contributions range from original scientific articles concerned with fundamental and applied aspects of research or direct applications of metallic, inorganic, organic and composite coatings, to invited reviews of current technology in specific areas. Papers submitted to this journal are expected to be in line with the following aspects in processes, and properties/performance:
A. Processes: Physical and chemical vapour deposition techniques, thermal and plasma spraying, surface modification by directed energy techniques such as ion, electron and laser beams, thermo-chemical treatment, wet chemical and electrochemical processes such as plating, sol-gel coating, anodization, plasma electrolytic oxidation, etc., but excluding painting.
B. Properties/performance: friction performance, wear resistance (e.g., abrasion, erosion, fretting, etc), corrosion and oxidation resistance, thermal protection, diffusion resistance, hydrophilicity/hydrophobicity, and properties relevant to smart materials behaviour and enhanced multifunctional performance for environmental, energy and medical applications, but excluding device aspects.