Nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloy

Specialized metallurgical processes – compositions for use therei – Compositions – Consolidated metal powder compositions

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75238, 75245, C22C 1900

Patent

active

055774245

DESCRIPTION:

BRIEF SUMMARY
TECHNICAL FIELD

This invention relates to a nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloy which possesses excellent thermal shock resistance, wear resistance and toughness and which shows exceptionally favorable properties when used as a material for cutting tools.


Background Art

There are already known cutting tools that are formed of a nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloy having hard phases of carbonitrides or the like composed mainly of Ti and bonded together through a metal phase made up of Ni and Co. Such a nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloy is extremely small in particle size of the hard phases compared to a conventional sintered hard alloy that contains no nitrogen, so that it shows much improved high-temperature creep resistance. Because of this favorable property, this material has been used for cutting tools as widely as what is known as cemented carbides, which are composed mainly of WC.
But nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloys are low in thermal shock resistance. This is because (1) its main component, Ti carbonitride, is extremely low in thermal conductivity compared to WC, the main component of a cemented carbide, so that the thermal conductivity as the entire alloy is about half that of a cemented carbide, and (2) its thermal expansion coefficient, which also largely depends upon that of main component, is 1.3 times that of a cemented carbide. Therefore, cutting tools made of such an alloy have not been used with reliability under conditions where the tools are subjected to severe thermal shocks such as for milling, lathing of square materials or for wet copy cutting where the depth of cut changes widely.
The present inventors have analyzed various phenomena associated with cutting operations such as the temperature and stress distributions in cutting tools in different cutting types and Studied the relation between such phenomena and the arrangement of components in the tool. As a result, they achieved the following findings. A cemented carbide, which has a high thermal conductivity, is less likely to heat up because the heat produced at the tool surface during cutting diffuses quickly through the tool body. Also, due to its low thermal expansion coefficient, tensile stresses are less likely to be produced and remain at the surface area even if the tool begins idling abruptly or the high-temperature portion is brought into contact with a water-soluble cutting oil and thus is cooled sharply.
In contrast, nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloys composed mainly of Ti show a sharp temperature gradient during cutting due to its low thermal conductivity. Namely, heat is difficult to diffuse from the areas where the temperature is the highest during cutting, such as the tip of the cutting edge and a portion of the rake face where chips collide, so that the temperature is high at the surface but is much lower at the inside. Once such an alloy gets a crack, it can be broken very easily because of low inner temperature. Conversely, if such an alloy is cooled sharply by contact with a cutting oil, the temperature gradient is reversed, that is, only the surface area is cooled sharply while the temperature at the inner portion directly thereunder remains high. Due to this fact and high thermal expansion coefficient, tensile stresses tend to be produced at the surface area, which dramatically increases the possibility of thermal cracks. Namely, it was difficult to sufficiently improve the thermal conductivity and thermal expansion coefficient of nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloys which contain Ti, a component necessary for a good surface finish. The inventors have carried out extensive studies for solutions to these problems and reached the present invention.


DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION

The nitrogen-containing sintered hard alloy according to the present invention has a Ti-rich layer at a superficial layer which determines the characteristics of the cut surface finish, and with a predetermined thickness provided right under the superficial layer a layer rich in binding metals such as

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