Standard laboratory test methods are useful to compare the cooling performance and cooling regimes of different quenchants under controlled environments where quenching occurs almost immediately. In reality, many industries rely on systems that require transferring through air from the austenitizing furnace to the quench tank. In this project, a special quench probe apparatus is used to characterize an industrial quenching process involving air transfer followed by quenching in low viscosity oil. The probe system allows investigation of the non-homogeneous condition before immersion. The heterogeneity of the process, through air and in the oil, is captured by modifying the position and orientation of the quench probes among many experiments. Multiple characteristic points were identified during the boiling stage due to its physical significance to produce time dependent analytical curves built up through piecewise polynomial interpolation while an optimization algorithm models the convective stage. Inverse analysis is carried out with the data captured by the probes to estimate time dependent temperature boundary conditions. The output can further be computed into a temperature dependent heat transfer coefficient curve. Results indicate that the phenomena occurring after immersion differ from laboratory results thus demonstrating the significance of characterizing the actual industrial process.

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