38 research outputs found

    On the nitrogen-induced lattice expansion of a non-stainless austenitic steel, Invar 36Ā®, under triode plasma nitriding

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    Chromium, as a strong nitride-forming element, is widely regarded to be an ā€œessentialā€ ingredient for the formation of a nitrogen-expanded lattice in thermochemical nitrogen diffusion treatments of austenitic (stainless) steels. In this article, a proprietary ā€œchrome-freeā€ austenitic iron-nickel alloy, InvarĀ® 36 (Fe-36Ni, in wt pct), is characterized after triode plasma nitriding (TPN) treatments at 400 Ā°C to 450 Ā°C and compared with a ā€œstainlessā€ austenitic counterpart RA 330Ā® (Fe-19Cr-35Ni, in wt pct) treated under equivalent nitriding conditions. Cr does indeed appear to play a pivotal role in colossal nitrogen supersaturation (and hence anisotropic lattice expansion and superior surface hardening) of austenitic steel under low-temperature (ā‰¤ā€‰450 Ā°C) nitrogen diffusion. Nevertheless, this work reveals that nitrogen-induced lattice expansion occurs below the nitride-containing surface layer in Invar 36 alloy after TPN treatment, implying that Cr is not a necessity for the nitrogen-interstitial induced lattice expansion phenomenon to occur, also suggesting another type of Ī³N

    Friction Properties of the DLC Film with Periodic Structures in Nano-scale

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    Femtosecond-laser-induced nanostructure formed on hard thin films of TiN and DLC

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