Chapter 4: Quenching of Steels
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Published:1996
Abstract
This chapter examines the cooling of steels from the austenite region. It describes the processes of determining the severity of quench. The chapter examines the methods to estimate the quench required if the size and shape of the part are known and the required cooling rate is known. The cooling rate correlation is used to calculate the hardness distribution across the diameter of cylinders. The calculations are used to illustrate the sensitivity of the hardness distribution to the severity of quench and the hardenability. The chapter discusses the methods of determining cooling rates in quenched steel components. It describes the formation of residual stresses in materials in which no phase change occurs on cooling. The chapter also examines the effect on the residual stresses of the phase changes in austenite. It provides information on two types of quench cracks in quenched steels, namely, microcracking and gross cracking during quenching.
Quenching of Steels, Principles of the Heat Treatment of Plain Carbon and Low Alloy Steels, By Charlie R. Brooks, ASM International, 1996, p 87–126, https://doi.org/10.31399/asm.tb.phtpclas.t64560087
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