Diamond coated cutting tools and method of manufacture

Metal treatment – Process of modifying or maintaining internal physical... – Producing or treating layered – bonded – welded – or...

Reexamination Certificate

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C148S537000

Reexamination Certificate

active

06436204

ABSTRACT:

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The invention pertains to a cutting tool which has a cobalt cemented tungsten carbide substrate with a strongly adherent diamond coating thereon.
In the past, brazed-on polycrystalline diamond (PCD) tipped cutting inserts and cutting inserts, which had have a chemical vapor deposition (CVD) diamond coating, have been used for material removal in certain applications. The workpiece materials for these material removal applications included free-machining aluminum alloys, high silicon aluminum, nonferrous materials (e.g., copper, bronze, and brass), ceramics materials, fiber-reinforced materials, graphite laminates, nylons, acrylics, phenolic resin materials, metal matrix composites (e.g., silicon carbide or alumina in an aluminum matrix), plastic, rubber and wood. While these PCD cutting inserts performed acceptably, these cutting inserts had an inherent disadvantage in that there was only one cutting edge per cutting insert. This was in contrast to a CVD diamond coated cutting insert which had multiple cutting edges, such as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 5,585,176 to Grab et al. (assigned to Kennametal Inc. of Latrobe, Pennsylvania, the assignee of the present patent application). While these earlier CVD diamond coated cutting inserts have performed in an acceptable fashion, there remains the need to develop other processes to produce diamond coated cutting inserts, as well as diamond coated cutting inserts produced by these other processes, which possess the requisite properties to perform in a satisfactory fashion. These properties include that the coating be strongly adherent to the substrate so as to avoid premature flaking, that the thickness of the coating be sufficiently great so as to provide for adequate tool life, and that the sharpness of the cutting edges being sufficiently sharp so as to provide for an acceptable workpiece surface finish (i.e., an acceptable surface roughness).
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
In one form thereof, the invention is a coated body which has a substrate made of tungsten, carbon, and cobalt. The substrate presents a surface. Eta phase is present at the surface of the substrate. Fibrous tungsten carbide grains are present at the surface of the substrate. The surface of the substrate has a surface roughness, R
a
, of greater than about 12 microinches. A coating layer is on the surface of the substrate.
In another form thereof, the invention is a process for making a coated body comprising the steps of: providing a substrate comprising tungsten, carbon and cobalt wherein the substrate has at least one surface with eta phase thereon; subjecting the substrate with eta phase on the surface thereof to a conversion treatment at a temperature between about 1250° C. and about 2000° C. under at least a partial vacuum for a duration sufficient as to convert at least a portion of the eta phase to fibrous tungsten carbide grains whereby the fibrous tungsten carbide grains are at the surface so that the substrate surface presents a surface roughness, R
a
, of greater than 12 microinches; and applying a coating to the surface of the substrate.
In still another form thereof, the invention is a process for making a coated body comprising the steps of: providing a substrate comprising tungsten, carbon and cobalt; the substrate presenting at least one surface; and the substrate having been subjected to a roughening heat treatment so as to cause grain growth of the tungsten carbide grains so that the surface of the substrate has a surface roughness, R
a
, of at least 12 microinches, and the roughening heat treatment causing the reduction of the concentration of the cobalt at the surface of the substrate; oxidizing the surface of the substrate which has been subjected to the roughening heat treatment so as to form eta phase at the surface of the substrate; subjecting the substrate with eta phase at the surface thereof to a conversion heat treatment at a temperature between about 1250° C. and about 2000° C. under at least a partial vacuum for a duration sufficient as to convert at least a portion of the eta phase to fibrous tungsten carbide grains so that the fibrous tungsten carbide grains are at the surface wherein the substrate surface presents a surface roughness, R
a
, of greater than 12 microinches; and applying a coating to the surface of the substrate.


REFERENCES:
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patent: 5217081 (1993-06-01), Waldenstrom et al.
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patent: 0519587 (1992-12-01), None
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patent: 9835071 (1998-08-01), None
Uhrenius, “Phase Diagrams as a tool for production and development of cemented carbides and steels,” Powder Metallurgy, vol. 35, No. 3 (1992), pp. 203-210.
Santhanam et al., “Cemented Carbides,” Metals Handbook, vol. 2, 10thEd. (1990), pp. 950-977.
Kennametal brochure entitled “KCD25 Diamond Film Coated Carbide Inserts” (1994).
Katsumura et al., “Effects of cobalt content and surface state on the cutting performance of diamond coated cemented carbide tools for aluminum-18% silicon alloy,” Keikinzoku, vol. 39, No. 9 (1989), pp. 634-8 (English translation).
Rüdiger et al., “The Problem of Evaporation of the Binder During the Vacuum Treatment of Cemented Carbides,” International Symposium on Powder Metallurgy, Paris, Jun. 1964, pp. 259-269 (English translation).

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