Boriding, also called boronizing, is the process by which boron is added to a metal or alloy. It is a type of surface hardening. In this process boron atoms are diffused into the surface of a metal component. The resulting surface contains metal borides, such as iron borides, nickel borides, and cobalt borides. As pure materials, these borides have extremely high hardness and wear resistance. Their favorable properties are manifested even when they are a small fraction of the bulk solid.[1] Boronized metal parts are extremely wear-resistant and will often last two to five times longer than components treated with conventional heat treatments such as hardening, carburizing, nitriding, nitrocarburizing, or induction hardening. Most borided steel surfaces will have iron boride layer hardnesses of 1200–1600 HV. Nickel-based superalloys such as Inconel and Hastalloys will typically have nickel boride layer hardnesses of 1700–2300 HV.

Methods

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Boriding can be achieved in several ways, but commonly the metal piece is packed with a boriding mixture and heated at 900 °C. A typical boriding mixture consists of boron carbide powder diluted with other refractory materials. The process converts some of the iron to iron boride, consisting of two phases: FeB concentrated near the surface, and diiron boride (Fe2B).[1] Boride layer depths can range from 0.001 to 0.015 inches (25 to 381 μm) depending on base material selection and treatment.

Materials

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It is often used on steel, but is applicable to a variety of alloys and cermet materials.[2][3] A wide range of materials suitable for treatment including plain carbon steels, alloy steels, tool steels, nickel-based super alloys, cobalt alloys, and stellite.

Properties conferred

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Boriding gives the material the following desirable properties: wear resistance, improved hardness (1300–2000HV is possible), thermal stability, resistance to corrosion by acids, reduced coefficient of friction, and increased galling/cold-welding resistance. It is possible to combine boriding with other heat treatments such as carburizing, hardening, or induction hardening to create deeper wear layers or high core hardness.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b Helmut Kunst, Brigitte Haase, James C. Malloy, Klaus Wittel, Montia C. Nestler, Andrew R. Nicoll, Ulrich Erning and Gerhard Rauscher "Metals, Surface Treatment" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, 2006, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim. doi:10.1002/14356007.a16_403.pub2
  2. ^ "Boriding – Bodycote PLC". Archived from the original on 2013-05-23. Retrieved 2012-12-28.
  3. ^ "Ultrafast Boriding in High Temperature Materials Processing Industries" (PDF). eere.energy.gov. Retrieved 15 April 2024.

Further reading

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📚 Artikel Terkait di Wikipedia

Boride

A boride is a compound between boron and a less electronegative element, for example silicon boride (SiB3 and SiB6). The borides are a large group of compounds

Superhard material

this approach, although it is not considered superhard. Alternatively, borides combined with transition metals have become a rich area of superhard research

Boron

increase the surface hardness of steels and alloys through boriding. Additionally metal borides are used for coating tools through chemical vapor deposition

Manganese boride

Manganese boride is a binary inorganic compound of manganese and boron with the chemical formula MnB. Manganese boride is a hard, high-melting ceramic

Iron boride

process known as boriding. There are a number of ways of forming boride coatings, including gas boriding, molten salt boriding, and pack boriding. Typically

Trinickel boride

Trinickel boride is a compound of nickel and boron with chemical formula Ni 3B. It is one of the borides of nickel. The compound was described in 1959

Dinickel boride

Dinickel boride is a chemical compound of nickel and boron with formula Ni 2B. It is one of the borides of nickel. The formula "Ni 2B" and the name "nickel

Boride carbide

Boride carbides, borocarbides or carboborides are chemical compounds composed of metal along with boride and carbide anions. They are mostly metallic in