| Literature DB >> 28787969 |
Niclas Ånmark1,2, Andrey Karasev3, Pär Göran Jönsson4.
Abstract
Considerable research has been conducted over recent decades on the role of non‑metallic inclusions and their link to the machinability of different steels. The present work reviews the mechanisms of steel fractures during different mechanical machining operations and the behavior of various non-metallic inclusions in a cutting zone. More specifically, the effects of composition, size, number and morphology of inclusions on machinability factors (such as cutting tool wear, power consumption, etc.) are discussed and summarized. Finally, some methods for modification of non-metallic inclusions in the liquid steel are considered to obtain a desired balance between mechanical properties and machinability of various steel grades.Entities:
Keywords: inclusions; machinability; steel
Year: 2015 PMID: 28787969 PMCID: PMC5455271 DOI: 10.3390/ma8020751
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1More than 40% of the total manufacturing cost in component manufacturing comes from different machining operations [4].
Figure 2A schematic illustration of the overall parameters that is included in the complex machinability concept.
Figure 3A schematic illustration of how machinability is connected to underlying factors and parameters including properties of work pieces, cutting tools and the machining conditions.
Figure 4Some typical machining processes, (a) longitudinal turning [7]; (b) twist drilling [8]; (c) face milling [9]; (d) slot milling [10].
Figure 5The link between energy consumption, type of machining process and metal category [4].
Figure 6(a) Discontinuous chip, Cutting speed +; (b) continuous over a built-up edge, Cutting speed ++; (c) continuous chip, Cutting speed +++; and (d) segmented chip [13], Cutting speed ++++.
Figure 7The chip formation process during turning [14].
Figure 8(a) Examples of tool wear patterns after turning of a hardened steel using a poly-crystalline boron nitride (PCBN) cutting tool; and (b) How to measure the crater depth (KT) and crater width (KB) [16].
Figure 9Typical temperature distribution in the cutting zone (in °C) [17].
Formation of additional stress fields, cavities and pores around non-metallic inclusions (NMI) and steel matrix due to different thermal expansions during heating and cooling.
| Coefficient of Thermal Expansion | Group 1: α | Group 2: α | Group 3: α |
|---|---|---|---|
| Heating | |||
| Stress in NMI | No effect | Stress in steel matrix around NMI | |
| Cooling | |||
| Stress in steel matrix around NMI | No effect | Formation of cavity and pores around NMI |
Figure 10Thermal expansion coefficients, α, for some (a) oxides and nitrides; and (b) complex oxides CaO-Al2O3-MgO-SiO2-MnO with respect to the steel matrix. References of point marks: red circle—[18], blue triangle—[19], green diamond—[20].
Figure 11Thermal expansion coefficients, α, for some sulfides in comparison to the steel matrix. References of point marks: red circle—[18], blue square—[21], green filled triangle—[22].
Comparative characteristics of different non-metallic inclusions in steels.
| Operation | Si-Deoxidation | Al-Deoxidation | Ca-Treatment (Modification of Oxides) | Addition of S | Ca-Treatment (Modification of Sulfides) | REM-Addition (Modification of Sulfides) | Addition of Zr, Ti, V, Nb or B |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-metallic inclusions (NMI) | SiO2, SiO2-MnO-... | Al2O3, Al2O3-MgO | CaO, CaO-Al2O3, CaO-Al2O3-... CaO-SiO2-… | MnS, (Mn,Fe)S | Ca(O,S), CaS, (Ca,Mn)S | REM-Ox, REM(O,S)x, REM-Sx | ZrN, Zr(N,C), TiN, Ti(N,C), BN, B(N,C), BC,
|
| Formation of NMI in steel | Partially in liquid steel. Partially during solidification of melt due to high content of soluble O (~60–80 ppm) | In liquid steel | In liquid steel | During solidification of melt (large size sulfides—mostly in final solidified zones) | In liquid steel | In liquid steel | Mostly during solidification of melt. Partially after solidification of melt |
| Size of NMI in cast metal | 1–8 µm | 0.1–8 µm | 1–25 µm | 0.5–30 µm | 1–5 µm | 1–3 µm | 0.01–7 µm |
| Condition/ Morphology * | Liquid or solid/SP and RE | Solid/Mostly RE and IR | Liquid or solid/Mostly SP | Solid/Mostly RE and IR | Solid/Mostly SP | Solid/SP and RE/IR | Solid/Mostly RE and IR |
| Distribution in steel | Mostly homogeneous | Mostly homogeneous | Mostly homogeneous | Mostly in final solidified zones, S inhomogeneity | Mostly homogeneous | Mostly homogeneous | Mostly on grain boundaries |
| Cluster formation | No | Very easy. Size of clusters 10–1000 µm | No | Dendrite or coral shape sulfides (Type II and IV), 10–100 µm | No | REM-oxides. Size of clusters 10–300 µm | TiN-“clusters”. Size of clusters 5–30 µm |
| Hardness of NMI (kg/mm2) | Middle/Low (~1600) | High (~3000) | Middle/Low (850–1200) | Low | Middle/Low | High | High |
| Deformability of NMI | Low at T < 900 °C High at T > 1000 °C | No at T < 1300 °C Low at T ≥ 1500 °C | No at T < 1200 °C High at T ≥ 1300 °C | Very high at T < 1000 °C | No at T < 1200 °C Low at T ≥ 1300 °C | Very low | Very low |
| Thermal expansion, α (×10−6 1/°C) | Very low (0.5–5.0) | Low (8.0–8.6) | Low/middle (for CaO-Al2O3 5.0–10.0) | MnS—high (18.1) | CaS—high (~14.7) | REM-Ox—middle (11.2–13.4) REM-Sx—middle (12.3–13.2) | TiN—low (~9.4) |
Notes: *: SP: spherical shape of inclusions, RE: regular shape of inclusions, IR: irregular shape of inclusions.
Qualitative influence of different non-metallic inclusions (NMI) on some mechanical properties and mechanical machinability of steels.
| Non-Metallic Inclusions (NMI) | SiO2, SiO2-MnO-... | Al2O3, Al2O3-MgO | CaO, CaO-Al2O3, CaO-Al2O3-..., CaO-SiO2-… | MnS, (Mn,Fe)S | Ca(O,S), CaS, (Ca,Mn)S | REM-Ox, REM(O,S)x, REM-Sx | ZrN, Zr(N,C), TiN, Ti(N,C), VN, V(N,C), BN, B(N,C), BC |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Effect of NMI on the mechanical properties of steel. | No or some anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel due to low elongation of silicate inclusions during deformation. | No anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel. | No anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel. Increasing of ductility and toughness of steel. | Very high (×1.5~10) anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel due to elongation of MnS during deformation. Significant decreasing of toughness, weldability and level of cold brittleness of steel. Large corrosion of steel. | Low or no anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel. Increasing of ductility and toughness of steel. | Low or no anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel. Improved ductility, toughness of steel, fatigue resistance of steel, impact strength, cold brittleness threshold. Improved corrosion resistance of steel. | No anisotropy of mechanical properties of steel. Significant increase of strength of steel, decreasing of toughness of steel. |
| Effect of NMI on the machinability of steel. | Cutting force and power consumption is very high. Chip formation is poor or normal. Tool wear rate is very high due to hard and abrasive NMI. | Cutting force and power consumption is very high. Chip formation is poor or normal. Tool wear rate is very high due to hard and abrasive NMI. | Cutting force and power consumption is high. Chip formation is good or normal. Tool wear rate is very low due to soft NMI and good lubrication effect. | Cutting force and power consumption is low or middle. Chip formation is good. Tool wear rate is low due to soft and ductile NMI and some lubrication effect. | Cutting force and power consumption is low or middle. Chip formation is normal. Tool wear rate is low due to some lubrication effect of NMI. | Cutting force and power consumption is high or middle. Chip formation is poor or normal. Tool wear rate is low or normal due to some lubrication effect of NMI. | Cutting force and power consumption is middle. Chip formation is normal. Tool wear rate is low, normal or high depending on hardness, size and number of NMI. |
Overview of published studies which considered the correlation of inclusion characteristics in different steel grades and their machinability parameters.
| Ref. | Year | Steel Grade a | Inclusion Characteristics | Machinability Parameter b | Main Result |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| [ | 1995 | “Clean”, carbon | (Mn,Ca)S, elongated, (CaO-Al2O3), globular | TL | Ca-treatment improves machinability |
| [ | 1995 | “Clean”, carbon, M-steel | (Mn,Ca)S, elongated, (CaOAl2O3), globular | TL, TW | Ca-treatment improves machinability |
| [ | 1981 | Ca-treated, carbon, M-steel | CaO-Al2O3, globular, CaO-Al2O3-SiO2, anorthite, globular | TL, TW | Ca-treatment improves machinability |
| [ | 2007 | Ca-treated, medium carbon steel, 0.35%–0.40% C, 0.02%–0.04% S | Al2O3-MgO, regular, CaO-Al2O3, 12CaO-7Al2O3, globular | TW | Ca-treatment improves machinability |
| [ | 1993 | SS 2541, Q & T | MnS, elongated, (Mn,Ca)S, globular, (CaO-Al2O3)-(Mn,Ca)S and CaO-Al2O3-SiO2, globular | TL, TW | Decreased flank wear progression due to Ca-treatment |
| [ | 2013 | 42CrMo, Q&T, 0.42% C, 0.0067% S | BN, globular, 5–20 µm | TW, CC | BN improved the machinability (drilling) |
| [ | 1999 | AISI 4140, Q&T, 0.0017%–0.0030% Ca, 0.4% C | MnS, (Ca,Mn)S, globular | TL, CF | Reduced torque and adhesion due to Ca-treatment |
| [ | 1993 | SS2541, ~0.35% C, 0.035% S 825B BB, 1% C, 0.011% S | MnS, (Ca,Mn)S, (CaO-Al2O3)-MnS, AlCaMnS | TW, CF | The protective (Mn,Ca)S layer reduced the crater wear |
| [ | 1984 | SS 2506, CH, S, Ca ~0.2% C, 0.04%–0.09% S, 0.0003%–0.0054% Ca | MnS, elongated, (Mn,Ca)S~elongated, (CaO-Al2O3)-(Mn,Ca)S and (CaO-Al2O3-SiO2)-(Mn,Ca)S, globular | TL, TW | S and Ca-treatment improves machinability |
| [ | 1986 | SS 2506, CH, Ca additions 0.04%–0.09% S | MnS, elongated, (Ca,Mn)S, (CaO-Al2O3)-(Mn,Ca)S, globular | TL, TW | Ca-treatment improves machinability |
| [ | 2001 | 40 CrMnMo8 Carbon 0.4% C, 0.008%–0.067% S | MnS, elongated, 20–100 µm, oxides, globular, 10 µm | TL, TW, CC | S addition increased the machinability by 40% |
| [ | 2001 | AISI 4340 ~0.4% C, 0.012%–0.034% S, 0–50 ppm O, 0–25 ppm Ca | (CaO-Al2O3)-(Mn,Ca)S, globular, 2–10 µm | TW, CF, CC | Ca-treatment indicates ridge formation after hard part turning |
| [ | 1984 | Structural steel | S, Se, Pb, Ca | TL | Additions of S, Se, Pb, Ca improved the machinability |
| [ | 1975 | Free mach, 0.3% S | MnS, elongated | TL, TW, CF | S additions improved the machinability |
| [ | 1975 | Free mach., 0.1% S | MnS, elongated, Al2O3, globular | TL, TW | S additions improve machinability |
| [ | 2006 | Free mach., 0.6% C, 0.3% S | MnS, elongated, 5–40 µm MnFe(Al,Si)S | CF, CC, SR | Cold deformation may improve machinability |
| [ | 2012 | Free mach., ~0.08% C, ~0.4% S | MnS, elongated, 10–20 µm (MnO-Al2O3)-MnS, globular, 15 µm (MnO-SiO2)-MnS, elongated, 20 µm | TW, CC, SR | Increased oxygen content improved the machinability |
| [ | 1997 | Free mach., 0.4% C, 0.1% S | (Mn,Ca)S, MnS, elongated, <10 µm, (RE,Ca)2S3-(Mn,Ca)S, Re2S3-MnS, globular, <10 µm | TW | Ca and RE additions increased the machinability of free-cutting steels |
| [ | 1996 | Free mach., stainless steel, 0.04%–0.08% C, <0.1% S, <0.01% Ca | CaO-Al2O3-SiO2-MnS, MnS, Gehlenite, Anorthite | TL, TW, CF | Ca and S additions increased the machinability of stainless steel |
| [ | 1990 | Stainless steel, 316 L 0.020%–0.027% C, 0.022%–0.025% S. 0.0002%–0.0045% Ca | MnS, (Mn,Ca)S, Gehlenite: Ca2Al[AlSiO7] + MnS Anorthite + MnS, elongated phases | TW, CF, CC | Anorthite inclusions are favorable for machining of 316L stainless steel |
| [ | 2010 | Super-duplex stainless steel, 0.017%–0.021% C, 0.005%–0.034% S. REM additions | REM-O, Oxy-sulfides, (Mn,Cr)S, globular, 2–10 µm | TL, TW | S and REM additions increased the tool life but the corrosion resistance was decreased |
| [ | 2011 | Austenitic stainess steel, 0.10%–0.11% C, 0.02%–0.11% S. Cu, Bi, Ti additions | MnS, Ti4C2S2, CuO, Bi, globular | TW, CF, CC | S, Bi, Cu and Ti additives improved the machinability |
Notes: a: steel grades: M-steel: Machinability improved steel; Q & T: Quench and tempered; CH: Case hardened steel; BB: Ball-bearing steel; b: machinability parameters such as the tool life (TL), tool wear (TW), cutting forces (CF), chip characteristics (CC), and surface roughness of work piece after machining (SR).
Content of C, S and Mn in some common steel grades (wt.%) [44].
| AISI Steel Grade | C | S | Mn |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1010 | 0.07–0.14 | 0.05 (max) | 0.25–0.60 |
| 1110 | 0.08–0.13 | 0.08–0.13 | 1.00–1.30 |
| 1037 | 0.31–0.38 | 0.05 (max) | 0.70–1.00 |
| 1137 | 0.32–0.39 | 0.08–0.13 | 1.35–1.65 |
| 1045 | 0.42–0.50 | 0.05 (max) | 0.60–0.90 |
| 1144 | 0.40–0.48 | 0.24–0.33 | 1.35–1.65 |
Figure 12Schematic illustration of the relationship between activities of O, Mn and S and the morphology of oxy-sulfides and sulfides in steel [47,48].
Figure 13Typical morphology of different sulfides. (a) Type I oxy-sulfide; (b) Type II (+IV) eutectic MnS; (c) Type III regular MnS [49,50].
Figure 14The typical morphology of a deformed sulfide [49]. (a) Rod-like and elongated MnS; and (b) Leaf-like deformed MnS inclusion.
Figure 15(a) Effect of sulfur content and hardness on the unit power consumption for different steel grades [44]; (b) Influence of sulfur content (high sulfur ~ 0.1%–0.3% S and low sulfur < 0.05% S) on the machinability in milling of case hardening steels [51].
Figure 16Activity of and N in equilibrium with various elements in liquid Fe at 1600 °C [56].
Figure 17(a) Shape control of sulfides due to calcium addition in HSLA steel [58]; (b) Ca/S ratio given in wt.% correlated to the number of unmodified MnS inclusions/cm in low sulfur carbon steel [59].
Figure 18(a) Sequence of formation of different REM inclusions in steel after REM additions in relation to the initial contents of O and S [62]; (b) Typical complex REM inclusion in steel with 0.02% REM [63].
Figure 19Impact strength in longitudinal (LS) and transverse (TS) samples as a function of the ratio of REM and S contents (in mass-%) in steel with additions of mischmetal or REM silicide [63].
Figure 20The effect of Ca and REM addition on the flank wear of free-cutting steels [40].
Figure 21Compositions of different oxide inclusions precipitated in aluminum (a) and silicon (b) deoxidized steel grades [68].
Types of main inclusions in experimental trials of AISI 316L stainless steel [42].
| Steel | Ca-Addition | Main Type of Oxide | Main Type of Sulfide |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | No (Ref.) | Alumina, Al2O3 | MnS |
| 2 | Yes | Gehlenite, Ca2Al[AlSiO7] | MnS + (Mn,Ca)S |
| 3 | Yes | Anorthite, CaAl2Si2O8 | MnS |
Figure 22Typical compositions of oxide inclusions observed in experimental trials of AISI 316L stainless steel [42].
Figure 23(a) Flank wear; and (b) crater wear progressions in turning test for AISI 316L steel with different non-metallic inclusions: (1)—alumina (Al2O3); (2)—gehlenite (2CaO·Al2O3·SiO2); and (3)—anorthite (CaO·Al2O3·2SiO2) [42].
Approximate hardness and melting temperature of some common oxides in steels [27].
| Inclusion | Inclusion Stoichiometry | Hardness (kg/mm2) | Melting Temperature, Tm (°C) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alumina | Al2O3 | 3000 | 2050 |
| Silicate | SiO2 | 1600 | 1720 |
| Calcium aluminates | (CaO)-(Al2O3) | 930 | 1330–1839 |
| Gehlenites | Ca2Al[AlSiO7] | 1200 | 1310–1590 |
| Anorthites | CaAl2Si2O8 | 850 | 1170–1550 |