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Richard Sisson
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Proceedings Papers
HT2017, Heat Treat 2017: Proceedings from the 29th Heat Treating Society Conference and Exposition, 305-310, October 24–26, 2017,
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Martensitic steels must be tempered to increase their toughness and ductility. The tempering process requires heating from room temperature to the desired tempering temperature. In this paper, the effects of heating rates on carbide precipitate size distribution, chemistry, and precipitate density will be discussed. As-quenched martensite in AISI 4140 steel was heated to selected tempering temperatures in air furnaces as well as by induction. The heating rates for tempering vary from 30 seconds to 20 minutes. The experimental results are presented, and carbides were characterized using an extraction technique.
Journal Articles
Journal: AM&P Technical Articles
AM&P Technical Articles (2017) 175 (4): 60–63.
Published: 01 May 2017
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New methods evaluate steel hardenability in a standard gas quench test and heat transfer coefficient variation within a furnace gas quench chamber.