Abstract
During the liquid quenching process, there are three main phases between the solid and the liquid interface: film boiling where vapor blanket covers the entire solid structure, transition or nucleate boiling, and single phase convection. The type of the quenching media, the agitation, and the flow pattern of a quench tank have significant effect on the cooling behavior during these three phases, which will affect the cooling rate, phase transformation, stress evolution and shape change of the quenched components. In this paper, transient CFD analysis using AVL FIRE is coupled with heat treatment analysis using DANTE to simulate an oil quench hardening process of a test gear made of Pyrowear 53. The gear is carburized prior to quench hardening. During the coupling analyses, the heat flux between the gear and the oil calculated in the CFD model is applied to the solid heat treatment model, and the gear surface temperature predicted by the heat treatment model is passed back to the transient CFD model. The aforementioned CFD tool is capable of considering the entire quenching domains without considering phase transformations in the quenched components. In the present case the gear is treated with a finite element tool in combination with DANTE to account for the latent heat release, which slows down the cooling. The relations between carbon content, temperature field, phase transformation, internal stress, and shape change during quenching are explained from the heat treatment modeling results. The coupling of CFD and heat treatment analyses provides a more robust application of computer modeling in the heat treatment industry.