EP0931849B1 - Process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces - Google Patents

Process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces Download PDF

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Publication number
EP0931849B1
EP0931849B1 EP98203391A EP98203391A EP0931849B1 EP 0931849 B1 EP0931849 B1 EP 0931849B1 EP 98203391 A EP98203391 A EP 98203391A EP 98203391 A EP98203391 A EP 98203391A EP 0931849 B1 EP0931849 B1 EP 0931849B1
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Prior art keywords
steel
layer
nitrogen
corrosion
metallic
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EP98203391A
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German (de)
French (fr)
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EP0931849A3 (en
EP0931849A2 (en
Inventor
Pietro Cerutti
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T.T.N. S.P.A.
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Material Service Holding SA
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C8/00Solid state diffusion of only non-metal elements into metallic material surfaces; Chemical surface treatment of metallic material by reaction of the surface with a reactive gas, leaving reaction products of surface material in the coating, e.g. conversion coatings, passivation of metals
    • C23C8/06Solid state diffusion of only non-metal elements into metallic material surfaces; Chemical surface treatment of metallic material by reaction of the surface with a reactive gas, leaving reaction products of surface material in the coating, e.g. conversion coatings, passivation of metals using gases
    • C23C8/34Solid state diffusion of only non-metal elements into metallic material surfaces; Chemical surface treatment of metallic material by reaction of the surface with a reactive gas, leaving reaction products of surface material in the coating, e.g. conversion coatings, passivation of metals using gases more than one element being applied in more than one step

Definitions

  • the present invention refers to a process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces, in particular without producing polluting materials.
  • the French patent 2 672 059 shows, as known and available systems or treatments for increasing the corrosion resistance of metallic pieces, salt baths or environments with an oxidising ionised atmosphere (plasma-ionic environments), in particular at page 2 of the description.
  • plasma-ionic environments oxidising ionised atmosphere
  • the barrier is obtained by dipping the metallic parts to be treated in liquid salt baths containing carbonates - nitrides - hidroxides and oxygenated alcali metals (for the oxidation phase).
  • the morphology of the so obtained protective layers is not compact enough because of the high level of porosity (up to 50%). Said porosity currently requires, to obtain a perfect insulation, a saturation with polymeric resins or waxes in order to close said porosity; otherwise preferred paths are present which will start the corrosion.
  • thermochemical means can not realise a thickness with a defined and constant chemical composition.
  • Said protection means are particularly weak and inefficient for corrosion protection in aqueous environment containing salts, for protection during dipping in solutions of melted light alloys and said protection means have a very low wettability associated to layers which have been subjected to hardening through nitride precipitation.
  • JP-A-56058963 discloses a surface treatment of a steel material involving a nitrification step in NH 3 at 450-600°C for 1-10h and a second step carried out in an oxidising atmosphere in the presence of superheated steam at 450 to 550°C.
  • JP-A-01079362 teaches a surface hardening, pollution free process comprising the formation of a soft-nitrated surface under non-oxidative conditions, followed by a gaseous oxidation treatment.
  • the United Stated patent No. 2,343,418 describes a method of making propeller blades for aircraft which comprises nitriding the outer surfaces of the blade by heating, subjecting to a gas treatment and then treating the blade with gas and air at a suitable stabilised temperature for a time sufficient to produce a non-reflecting oxidised surface on the nitrided outside of the blade.
  • EP-A-0299625 discloses a method for producing a black wear and corrosion resistant finish by the steps of forming an epsilon iron nitride or carbonitride layer, bringing the component to gas oxidation temperature and oxidising by a gaseous medium to form a dense black coating and carrying out a surface finish treatment.
  • US-patent No. 4,496, 410 discloses a method for producing a corrosion resistant non-alloy steel component comprising the steps of nitriding a non alloy steel component and producing an epsilon iron nitride surface layer thereon, and heat treating the component in an oxidising atmosphere to provide an oxide-rich surface layer and then quenching the component into an oil/water emulsion with the component at a temperature such that nitrogen is retained in solid solution in the ferric matrix of the steel microstructure.
  • the purpose of the present invention is to define a process which can solve the above mentioned technical problems.
  • Said purpose, according to the present invention is achieved by realising a process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces as disclosed by claim 1 in the following claims.
  • a pure magnetite layer as it will be shown in details hereinafter, will be realised for at least the first 3-5 ⁇ m on the surface of a metallic piece to be treated, as for instance on a tool steel or on a hadened and tempered steel and on low-alloy steel as well as on sheet steel.
  • the process suitable to give a direct protection against the corrosion of metallic pieces according to the present invention is an innovative gaseous process. This fact allows to eliminate any geometric and/or dimensional restriction since the convection puts the reacting agents in contact with the entire surface of the piece to be treated for protection.
  • the invention allows the application of a layer of iron oxide, Fe 3 O 4 , even on parts with a vertical length of up to 10 meters or with 2.5 meter diameter.
  • the process residual gases are directed to a post-combustor which releases only N 2 - H 2 - O 2 in totally neutral gases into the environment.
  • the surface layer produced through the invention process has a nitrogen diffusion area with a maximum depth of 0.1 mm. Said diffusion has to have a nitrogen weight % lower than 2%, said percentage being different in function of the steel type of the piece to be treated.
  • the nitrogen during this phase, is diffused through the grain edge and fills. the vacancies or the vacant areas formed by imperfections of the crystal lattice. As an alternative, the nitrogen atoms are trapped in the free interstitial gaps of the surface of the piece to be treated.
  • the temperature of this first phase of the process is comprised between 480 - 505°C for hardened and tempered steel, and between 500 - 525°C for tool steel.
  • the nitrogen weight % decreases while going towards the inner portion of the surface and it becomes almost zero at depth over 0.1 mm.
  • the duration of this first phase is no more than 10 hours.
  • layers of 2-4 ⁇ m thick iron oxide Fe 3 O 4 are formed at temperatures comprised between 505 and 545°C, said layers contain oxygen weight % between 25% and 30%.
  • a very important factor is the stability of the above oxygen content inside the steel structure and inside the entire so obtained thickness.
  • the transition from the layer below is realised through a sudden decrease of the oxygen percentage from 25-30% to zero on a maximum depth of about 1 ⁇ m.
  • the integration of a layer with a high level of chemical stability which makes the compound stable in a steel matrix previously hardened by a nitrogen diffusion of about 0.1 mm, makes available a barrier and insulation effect of a protective film directly from inside the steel. It is like having two different compounds integrated one into the other and exerting a mutually consolidating action. In fact, the steel supports and makes compact the oxide, while the oxide protects and insulates the steel.
  • the magnetite repellence towards all the liquid solutions is generally given by the compactness and by the compression level of the outer layers.
  • Said compression is due to the difference between the lattice structure of the oxide and the iron cell (body-centered cubic lattice).
  • the surface clearly compresses the lower layers; in this way, if the brittleness of these layers is not so high to cause cracks and flakings, we will obtain a mechanical closing action against any outside corrosive environment or alloying solution or light alloy mixtures (Al, Pb, brass).
  • magnetite has the following more interesting characteristics in order to assure the protection from environment corrosion and/or from melted metals:
  • This invention has produced the realisation of a magnetite layer in a gaseous environment, said realisation converts a 2-4 ⁇ m thick layer previously hardened through nitrogen diffusion into oxide.
  • the process of the invention is realised through a systematic and continuous control of the process parameters in function of the chemical analysis of a differential quantum-meter GDS versus the depth associated with more sporadic controls with X-rays.
  • a further parameter to be taken into account is the ratio between the linear thermal expansion coefficients of the oxide and of the metal contiguous thereto.
  • FeO/Fe goes to 1.25 at temperatures up to 1000°C and to a 1.03 value for Fe 2 O 3 /Fe.
  • thermochemical means used up to now have a chemical composition of the layer quite different from the one which is defined by an oxygen weight % comprised between 21 and 25% and constant over the first 4-5 ⁇ m as in the present invention.
  • the process of the invention produces this barrier which has a chemical identity with a defined and constant composition without changes into a transition composition with the base metal.
  • X38CrMoV5.1 steel samples have been treated by diffusion during a first phase for 10 hours at a 525°C temperature.
  • the first nitrogen diffusion phase has been stopped and, during a second phase, an oxygen containing atmosphere has been introduced for 5-6 hours at a 545°C temperature.
  • said bar had been treated with a known method, as for instance the one according to the French patent 2 672 059, said bar would have been subjected to a salt bath for 10 hours.
  • the oxidation according to the present invention does not jeopardise the previously acquired characteristics in terms of wear and seizing strength; on the contrary, especially in reference to this last feature, the oxidation greatly improves the friction and the plasticity coefficient of the hardened layers, thanks to the morphology of the hexagonal crystal lattice.

Abstract

In a process suitable to give a direct protection against the corrosion of metallic pieces, a nitrogen diffusion area is realised on the outer layer with a maximum depth of 0.1 mm, and with a nitrogen weight % lower than 2-4%, depending on the steel to he treated. The nitrogen is diffused into the piece and fills the imperfections and the empty areas of the crystal lattice. The temperature at which this first phase takes place goes from 480 to 525 DEG C depending from the steel type and the maximum duration is of 10 hours. Then, both the temperature values and the gas mixture, by introducing an oxidising atmosphere, are changed and the nitrogen diffusion is fully stopped by the oxygen action of the oxidising atmosphere against the iron atoms of the surface. Layers of Fe3O4 at 95-99% content are obtained, practically FeO/Fe2O3 oxides free, which are formed at temperatures comprised between 505 and 545 DEG C and which are comprised between 2 and 4 mu m and containing an oxygen weight % between 25% and 30%. A strong barrier and insulation effect is thereby obtained directly within the steel.

Description

  • The present invention refers to a process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces, in particular without producing polluting materials.
  • Processes and treatments to realise a protection against the corrosion of metallic pieces are generally known, as for instance the processes described in the previous patents FR 2 672 059, US 5.346.560 and GB 2 298 434.
  • In general, these systems provide the production of magnetite layers on the steel which has to be protected. These known processes use salt dipping with cyanides, cyanates and a post-oxidation.
  • For instance, the French patent 2 672 059 shows, as known and available systems or treatments for increasing the corrosion resistance of metallic pieces, salt baths or environments with an oxidising ionised atmosphere (plasma-ionic environments), in particular at page 2 of the description.
  • In this way it is not possible to realise a barrier which can withstand the wear and the corrosion in a particularly efficient and resistant way, above all said barrier is limited in dimensions and geometry. In fact, the barrier is obtained by dipping the metallic parts to be treated in liquid salt baths containing carbonates - nitrides - hidroxides and oxygenated alcali metals (for the oxidation phase).
  • The morphology of the so obtained protective layers is not compact enough because of the high level of porosity (up to 50%). Said porosity currently requires, to obtain a perfect insulation, a saturation with polymeric resins or waxes in order to close said porosity; otherwise preferred paths are present which will start the corrosion.
  • The above mentioned and. to date used thermochemical means can not realise a thickness with a defined and constant chemical composition.
  • Said protection means are particularly weak and inefficient for corrosion protection in aqueous environment containing salts, for protection during dipping in solutions of melted light alloys and said protection means have a very low wettability associated to layers which have been subjected to hardening through nitride precipitation.
  • Further, the limits of these known processes and treatments are significant and are also related, in particular, to the dimensions of the steel elements or products to be subjected to treatment.
  • In fact, the above mentioned processes can only treat products with small dimensions and with simple geometry without cavities and without deep holes.
  • Further it has to be pointed out the significant environmental limits and problems for the storage and disposal of salty compounds with high toxic emissions and fumes which are derived and developed from the known processes.
  • JP-A-56058963 discloses a surface treatment of a steel material involving a nitrification step in NH3 at 450-600°C for 1-10h and a second step carried out in an oxidising atmosphere in the presence of superheated steam at 450 to 550°C.
  • JP-A-01079362 teaches a surface hardening, pollution free process comprising the formation of a soft-nitrated surface under non-oxidative conditions, followed by a gaseous oxidation treatment.
  • The United Stated patent No. 2,343,418 describes a method of making propeller blades for aircraft which comprises nitriding the outer surfaces of the blade by heating, subjecting to a gas treatment and then treating the blade with gas and air at a suitable stabilised temperature for a time sufficient to produce a non-reflecting oxidised surface on the nitrided outside of the blade.
  • EP-A-0299625 discloses a method for producing a black wear and corrosion resistant finish by the steps of forming an epsilon iron nitride or carbonitride layer, bringing the component to gas oxidation temperature and oxidising by a gaseous medium to form a dense black coating and carrying out a surface finish treatment.
  • US-patent No. 4,496, 410 discloses a method for producing a corrosion resistant non-alloy steel component comprising the steps of nitriding a non alloy steel component and producing an epsilon iron nitride surface layer thereon, and heat treating the component in an oxidising atmosphere to provide an oxide-rich surface layer and then quenching the component into an oil/water emulsion with the component at a temperature such that nitrogen is retained in solid solution in the ferric matrix of the steel microstructure.
  • The purpose of the present invention is to define a process which can solve the above mentioned technical problems.
  • Said purpose, according to the present invention; is achieved by realising a process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces as disclosed by claim 1 in the following claims.
  • The characteristics and the advantages of a process suitable to give a direct protection against the corrosion of metallic pieces according to the present invention will be better understood from the following description, which is given as a non limiting example.
  • In a process suitable to give a direct protection against the corrosion of metallic pieces according to the present invention, a pure magnetite layer, as it will be shown in details hereinafter, will be realised for at least the first 3-5 µm on the surface of a metallic piece to be treated, as for instance on a tool steel or on a hadened and tempered steel and on low-alloy steel as well as on sheet steel.
  • It has to be pointed out that the process does not require any particular preventative preparation of the pieces to be treated and further that the so obtained oxide layer is produced without releasing or producing any toxic or polluting residual.
  • The process suitable to give a direct protection against the corrosion of metallic pieces according to the present invention is an innovative gaseous process. This fact allows to eliminate any geometric and/or dimensional restriction since the convection puts the reacting agents in contact with the entire surface of the piece to be treated for protection.
  • In particular, the invention allows the application of a layer of iron oxide, Fe3O4, even on parts with a vertical length of up to 10 meters or with 2.5 meter diameter.
  • The process residual gases are directed to a post-combustor which releases only N2 - H2 - O2 in totally neutral gases into the environment.
  • The surface layer produced through the invention process has a nitrogen diffusion area with a maximum depth of 0.1 mm. Said diffusion has to have a nitrogen weight % lower than 2%, said percentage being different in function of the steel type of the piece to be treated. The nitrogen, during this phase, is diffused through the grain edge and fills. the vacancies or the vacant areas formed by imperfections of the crystal lattice. As an alternative, the nitrogen atoms are trapped in the free interstitial gaps of the surface of the piece to be treated.
  • The temperature of this first phase of the process is comprised between 480 - 505°C for hardened and tempered steel, and between 500 - 525°C for tool steel.
  • The nitrogen weight % decreases while going towards the inner portion of the surface and it becomes almost zero at depth over 0.1 mm. The duration of this first phase is no more than 10 hours.
  • Then, both the temperature values and the gas mixture, by introducing an oxidising atmosphere, are changed.
  • During this second phase, the nitrogen diffusion is completely stopped by the adverse action of the oxygen comprised in the oxidising atmosphere against the iron atoms of the surface.
  • Layers of Fe3O4 at 95-99% content are obtained, almost FeO/Fe2O3 oxides free which have a higher oxygen content.
  • In fact, these latest oxides would be particularly disadvantageous as a protective and anti-corrosion agents since they have a high growth rate and therefore they can easily break.
  • According to the invention, layers of 2-4 µm thick iron oxide Fe3O4 are formed at temperatures comprised between 505 and 545°C, said layers contain oxygen weight % between 25% and 30%.
  • A very important factor is the stability of the above oxygen content inside the steel structure and inside the entire so obtained thickness.
  • The transition from the layer below is realised through a sudden decrease of the oxygen percentage from 25-30% to zero on a maximum depth of about 1 µm.
  • Therefore the integration of a layer with a high level of chemical stability, which makes the compound stable in a steel matrix previously hardened by a nitrogen diffusion of about 0.1 mm, makes available a barrier and insulation effect of a protective film directly from inside the steel. It is like having two different compounds integrated one into the other and exerting a mutually consolidating action. In fact, the steel supports and makes compact the oxide, while the oxide protects and insulates the steel.
  • This allows to have simultaneously a chemical barrier and a high temperature oxidation strength with characteristics of compactness, wear resistance, abrasion and glueing (adhesive wear).
  • In fact, the magnetite repellence towards all the liquid solutions is generally given by the compactness and by the compression level of the outer layers.
  • Said compression is due to the difference between the lattice structure of the oxide and the iron cell (body-centered cubic lattice).
  • If the ratio (between the iron lattice step and the oxide lattice step) is lower than 1, then the surface clearly compresses the lower layers; in this way, if the brittleness of these layers is not so high to cause cracks and flakings, we will obtain a mechanical closing action against any outside corrosive environment or alloying solution or light alloy mixtures (Al, Pb, brass).
  • It has to be pointed out that the magnetite has the following more interesting characteristics in order to assure the protection from environment corrosion and/or from melted metals:
    • low electric conductivity which reduces the migration of the active ionised agents which further increase the oxide layer with consequent crumbling;
    • high link energy which requires a higher amount of heat to destabilise the surface E=KT which withstands temperatures up to 900°C. This allows the use at high temperatures, notwithstanding the fact that the use in situations wherein the working temperatures is high is often accompanied by degenerative phenomena as for instance the wear and the abrasion;
    • at this point also another characteristic of the magnetite becomes of interest, i.e. its compactness and its chemical stability which become a high hardness (850HV = 75 HRC) ;
    • the hexagonal lattice structure gives additionally the possibility of a parallel sliding of the atomic planes one over the other; where there the planes with higher atomic compactness (Closed Packet).
  • This invention has produced the realisation of a magnetite layer in a gaseous environment, said realisation converts a 2-4 µm thick layer previously hardened through nitrogen diffusion into oxide.
  • The technical solutions and the great advantages consist in having the possibility to protect from the inside, without the application of any film or coating, the steel product without limits due to the dimensions and/or the shape.
  • For instance, the process of the invention is realised through a systematic and continuous control of the process parameters in function of the chemical analysis of a differential quantum-meter GDS versus the depth associated with more sporadic controls with X-rays.
  • A further parameter to be taken into account is the ratio between the linear thermal expansion coefficients of the oxide and of the metal contiguous thereto.
  • For instance the value of FeO/Fe goes to 1.25 at temperatures up to 1000°C and to a 1.03 value for Fe2O3/Fe. The closer the value to 1 the safer the coupling of the metal-oxide even under stress and thermal tensions as the ones present in pressure die casting and in hot forging.
  • It has been previously pointed out that the thermochemical means used up to now have a chemical composition of the layer quite different from the one which is defined by an oxygen weight % comprised between 21 and 25% and constant over the first 4-5 µm as in the present invention.
  • The process of the invention produces this barrier which has a chemical identity with a defined and constant composition without changes into a transition composition with the base metal.
  • By using the process of the invention there is no porosity since the increase in gaseous agents is realised in a very diluted way so that no local high pressures are originated. In fact, the high local pressures, by effect of the gaseous atom coalescence within the host matrix, would be higher than the steel ultimate tensile stress and would therefore cause an opening towards the outside.
  • The extension of the above process to parts of any dimensions (up to 11 m height) and shape is the reason for this patent application to cover the formation of a magnetite (Fe3O4) layer through gaseous agents, i.e. by using convective heat plants wherein there is a light overpressure of 25-30 mbar and the steel is the reaction catalyst.
  • EXAMPLE 1
  • X38CrMoV5.1 steel samples have been treated by diffusion during a first phase for 10 hours at a 525°C temperature.
  • In this way, a N2 diffusion thickness of about 100 µm has been realised.
  • Then, the first nitrogen diffusion phase has been stopped and, during a second phase, an oxygen containing atmosphere has been introduced for 5-6 hours at a 545°C temperature.
  • In this way, a Fe3O4 thickness of about 3 µm has been realised.
  • We have therefore obtained a bar sample having perfect glueing strength characteristics and corrosion strength characteristics towards liquid Al at 700°C.
  • If said bar had been treated with a known method, as for instance the one according to the French patent 2 672 059, said bar would have been subjected to a salt bath for 10 hours.
  • Then the bar should have been treated with an oxidising bath. A bar sample would have been obtained with melted surface characteristics and with the formation of Fe-Al inter-metallic phases having a quick breaking action of the underneath matrix.
  • The advantages according to the process of the present invention are evident since there is a significant increase in the protection of the surface against the combined wear-corrosion action caused by Al alloys with silicates in suspension.
  • In fact, the oxidation according to the present invention does not jeopardise the previously acquired characteristics in terms of wear and seizing strength; on the contrary, especially in reference to this last feature, the oxidation greatly improves the friction and the plasticity coefficient of the hardened layers, thanks to the morphology of the hexagonal crystal lattice.

Claims (5)

  1. A process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces in which each metallic piece is subjected to nitriding with subsequent and integrated production of a magnetite (Fe3O4) layer, wherein said metallic piece, during a first phase,
       is treated in a gaseous environment with diffused nitrogen at a temperature between 480-525°C and for no more than 10 hours,
       until said metallic piece reaches N2 weight % no higher than about 4% in a diffusion layer of said metallic piece
       and, during a second phase, once the nitrogen feeding is stopped, the metallic piece is treated in a gaseous oxidising environment at a temperature between 505 and 545°C, such that
       a magnetite layer is formed which is distributed on the surface of said metallic piece with a thickness of 3-5 µm and the transition gradient between the Fe3O4 layer (O2 = 25-30 %) and the N2 diffusion layer (O2 ≅ about 0%) is ≤ 1 µm so as to guarantee the chemical identity of the two areas having a complementary and integrated anti-wear anti-corrosion action.
  2. A process according to claim 1, characterised in that said magnestite (Fe3O4) layer contain oxygen between 25 and 30% by weight.
  3. A process according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that said N2 weight percentage is at about 4% for Al or Cr containing steel.
  4. A process according to claim 1 or 2, characterised in that said N2 weight percentage is at about 2% for hardened and tempered steels and for low-allow steels.
  5. A process according to anyone of claims 1-4, characterised in that it comprises a preliminary cleaning and surface mechanical activation of metallic pieces in an advanced state of use.
EP98203391A 1998-01-26 1998-10-09 Process suitable to give a direct protection against the wear corrosion of metallic pieces Expired - Lifetime EP0931849B1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (2)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
IT98MI000131A IT1298200B1 (en) 1998-01-26 1998-01-26 PROCEDURE TO PROVIDE DIRECT PROTECTION AGAINST WEAR CORROSION TO METAL PIECES
ITMI980131 1998-01-26

Publications (3)

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EP0931849A2 EP0931849A2 (en) 1999-07-28
EP0931849A3 EP0931849A3 (en) 2000-08-02
EP0931849B1 true EP0931849B1 (en) 2003-05-28

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AT (1) ATE241711T1 (en)
DE (1) DE69815051T2 (en)
ES (1) ES2201405T3 (en)
IT (1) IT1298200B1 (en)

Families Citing this family (4)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
JP2003129213A (en) * 2001-10-16 2003-05-08 Honda Motor Co Ltd Production method for nitrided steel
DE102011078171A1 (en) 2011-06-28 2013-01-03 Robert Bosch Gmbh Method for applying a corrosion-resistant and wear-resistant layer on a metal part
JP5865487B2 (en) * 2012-04-03 2016-02-17 日立金属工具鋼株式会社 Casting member and method for manufacturing the same, die casting sleeve, and die casting apparatus
DE102014210571A1 (en) * 2014-06-04 2015-12-17 Robert Bosch Gmbh Component element of an assembly and manufacturing method thereof

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2343418A (en) * 1941-01-02 1944-03-07 Aviat Corp Method of making propeller blades
JPS5658963A (en) * 1979-10-20 1981-05-22 Kiyoichi Ogawa Method and device for nitrified-layer stabilizing vapor coating processing
US4496401A (en) * 1981-10-15 1985-01-29 Lucas Industries Corrosion resistant steel components and method of manufacture thereof
GB2208658B (en) * 1987-07-17 1992-02-19 Lucas Ind Plc Manufacture of corrosion resistant steel components
JPS6479362A (en) * 1987-09-22 1989-03-24 Isuzu Motors Ltd Method and device for surface hardening
CA2016843A1 (en) * 1990-05-15 1991-11-15 Michel J. Korwin Thermochemical treatment of machinery components for improved corrosion resistance
JP3142689B2 (en) * 1993-06-29 2001-03-07 株式会社神戸製鋼所 Spring with excellent fatigue strength

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ATE241711T1 (en) 2003-06-15
EP0931849A3 (en) 2000-08-02
IT1298200B1 (en) 1999-12-20
DE69815051T2 (en) 2004-04-08
EP0931849A2 (en) 1999-07-28
DE69815051D1 (en) 2003-07-03
ES2201405T3 (en) 2004-03-16
ITMI980131A1 (en) 1999-07-26

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