US2395195A - Treatment of metals - Google Patents

Treatment of metals Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2395195A
US2395195A US488987A US48898743A US2395195A US 2395195 A US2395195 A US 2395195A US 488987 A US488987 A US 488987A US 48898743 A US48898743 A US 48898743A US 2395195 A US2395195 A US 2395195A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
cavity
conductor
work
diameter
mold
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US488987A
Inventor
Wesley M Roberds
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
RCA Corp
Original Assignee
RCA Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by RCA Corp filed Critical RCA Corp
Priority to US488987A priority Critical patent/US2395195A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2395195A publication Critical patent/US2395195A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H05ELECTRIC TECHNIQUES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR
    • H05BELECTRIC HEATING; ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES NOT OTHERWISE PROVIDED FOR; CIRCUIT ARRANGEMENTS FOR ELECTRIC LIGHT SOURCES, IN GENERAL
    • H05B6/00Heating by electric, magnetic or electromagnetic fields
    • H05B6/02Induction heating
    • H05B6/36Coil arrangements
    • H05B6/40Establishing desired heat distribution, e.g. to heat particular parts of workpieces

Definitions

  • ferrous metal parts in many industrial applications and other fields of use is very well known. Where such parts involve surfaces which rub against each other or against which great pressures are applied, as in the case of mold cavities in which bullets are molded, for example, these surfaces are subjected to considerable wear. In order to prolong the life of the part involved, it has been necessary to harden the working surfaces thereof. For this purpose, it has been proposed heretofore to pass radio frequency currents through the work at sufliciently high power to obtain extremely rapid heating thereof along only a relatively thin layer under the surface to be hardened. In general, this is accomplished by scanning the work along the surface to be hardened with a suitable applicator in the form of an inductor coil which is con nected to a source of radio frequency energy.
  • an inductor of slightly larger internal diameter than the diameter of the shaft is placed around the latter and relative movement is effected between the shaft and the inductor while energy is supplied thereto.
  • the high frequency current induced in the work heats the work rapidly as the work is scanned.
  • an inductor coil of slightly smaller external diameter than the internal diameter of the tube is utilized, and the work is similarly scanned.
  • the work to be scanned is of such small diameter at the surface to be hardened that the use of an applicator ring or an. inductor coil is not feasible, since coils of small diameter are difllcult to form out of hollow conductor such as are employed with radio frequency currents.
  • the surfaces to be hardened are not uniform in diameter. For example, in the case of molds em: ployed in the manufacture of small bullets, the mold cavities are both of non-uniform diameter and of too small a diameter even at the widest point to make the use of an inductor coil feasible.
  • the primary object of my present invention is to provide an improved method of altering the hardnes of metallic members of small size which will not be subject to the above mentioned limitations.
  • a still more specific object of my present invention is to provide an improved method of hardening the. walls of cavities formed in metallic members, which cavities are too small to accommodate inductor heating coils such as are conventionally used with radio frequency heating methods.
  • the metallic member of which one surface is to be hardened is made to act as one element or conductor of a concentric line, and a radio frequency current i passed through such line. Since radio frequency currents are known to pass along the adjacent surfaces of the elements of a concentric line, it is apparent that the current will pass substantially along the surface to be hardened. Now, if the current is made of sufficient intensity or is supplied at sufficiently high power, it can be made to heat the surface of which the hardness is to be altered with extreme rapidity.
  • the member may be arranged to act as the outer conductor of a concentric line with the wall of the cavity being the inner surface of said outer conductor.
  • a second conductor such a a tube of copper or the like which may be water cooled, is placed within the cavity in concentric relation therewith and caused to make contact with the work at the bottom of the cavity.
  • the copper tube is of smaller internal diameter than that of the cavity and forms the inner conductor of the concentric line. Radio frequency current passed through the line will flow along the outer surface of the inner, tubular conductor in one direction, and back along the wall of the cavity in the opposite direction.
  • Figure 2 is a similar view showing a slightly different way of practicing this invention.
  • a metallic member i having a cavity 3 therein the surface of which is to be hardened.
  • the member I may be a bullet mold of ferrous metal for molding bullets of small size, say, up to 50 calibre.
  • the cavity 3 is the mold cavity appropriate to the particular bullets to be formed.
  • a tubular conductor 5 of copper or the like one end in of which is of reduced diameter for snug reception in an opening 1 formed in the mold i and communicating with the pointed end of the mold cavity 3.
  • the opening 1 has been shown of relatively large diameter in the drawing for the sake of clearness, but it is to be understood that in practice the diameter thereof will be very small.
  • the opening 1 is so arranged that when the tubular conductor 5 is inserted therein, the conductor 5 will be coaxial or concentric with the cavity 3.
  • the mold I forms the outer conductor and the tube 5 the inner conductor of an electrically closed line in the nature of a concentric line.
  • the concentric line I, 5 is connected through a suitable transformer 9 to a source of high frequency electric energy I I, such as a vacuum tube oscillation generator supplying radio frequency current.
  • a source of high frequency electric energy I I such as a vacuum tube oscillation generator supplying radio frequency current.
  • the generator is connected to the concentric line i, 5
  • the high frequency current passes in one direction along substantially the outer surface of the inner conductor 5 and then in the opposite direction along substantially the surface of the cavity 3. It is desirable that current be supplied at sufficient power to substantially instantaneously heat a very thin layer under the wall of the cavity 3 to the hardening temperature, and the metal of the mold i which backs up the cavity may be utilized for selfquenching in the manner more fully set forth and claimed in the copending application of George H. Brown, Serial No. 421,746, and assigned to Radio Corporation of America.
  • the heated work may be water quenched by simply withdrawing the inner conductor 5 from the cavity 3 while cooling water is flowing therethrough and permitting the water to flow against the heated wall of
  • the cavity diflerently than in the mold of Fig. 1, and the opening I is omitted.
  • the inner, tubular conductor 5 may be closed at one end and its closed end my be brought into intimate contact with the apex end of the cavity 3.
  • a suitable supporting bracket i3 may be provided along which the conductor 5 can be slid.
  • a partition l5 within the hollow conductor 5 terminating at a point short of its closed end provides a path for the cooling fluid as indicated by the applied arrows.
  • the operation of this particular arrangement is similar to that described in connection with Fig. 1.
  • the inner conductor 5 might be provided with an outwardly extending circular flange which would be caused to engage the inner wall of the tubular work, and the conductor 5 could then be slid along the support l3 while the flange is in engagement with the inner surface of the work. In this is produced.
  • this method of practicing the present invention may not be suitable in some instances, and, in general, the one shot of current metho is preferred in connection with such arangements as are illustrated in the accompanying drawing.
  • the method of heat treating with the aid of an electrically conductive member the wall surface of a cavity formed in a metallic member, said cavity having a substantially closed inner end which comprises inserting said first named member into said cavity in concentric relation therewith and bringing the inner end of said first named member into-engagement with the inner end of said cavity whereby to establish electrical connection between said members and thereby provide an electrically closed line in the nature of a concentric line, passing a radio frequency current through said line to effect heating of said wall surface, and thereafter separating said members from each other.

Description

Feb. 19, 1946. w, RQBERDS 2,395,195
TREATMENT OF METALS Filed May 29, 1943 146.1. 9 f j 1/. r.
' I OSCILLI'I'OR COOIIHN'I' Zhwentor Wesley M.Raberds Gttomeg Patented Feb. 19, 1946 TREATMENT OF METALS Wesley M. Roberds, Collingswood, N. J., assignor to Radio Corporation of America, a corporation of Delaware Application May 29, 1943, Serial No. 488,987 1 Claim. (01. 219-12 This invention relates to the heat treatment of metals, and more particularly to a method of altering the hardness of the wall surfaces of hollow metallic members. I
The use of ferrous metal parts in many industrial applications and other fields of use is very well known. Where such parts involve surfaces which rub against each other or against which great pressures are applied, as in the case of mold cavities in which bullets are molded, for example, these surfaces are subjected to considerable wear. In order to prolong the life of the part involved, it has been necessary to harden the working surfaces thereof. For this purpose, it has been proposed heretofore to pass radio frequency currents through the work at sufliciently high power to obtain extremely rapid heating thereof along only a relatively thin layer under the surface to be hardened. In general, this is accomplished by scanning the work along the surface to be hardened with a suitable applicator in the form of an inductor coil which is con nected to a source of radio frequency energy. Thus, for example, if the surface of a cylindrical rod or shaft is to be hardened, an inductor of slightly larger internal diameter than the diameter of the shaft is placed around the latter and relative movement is effected between the shaft and the inductor while energy is supplied thereto. The high frequency current induced in the work heats the work rapidly as the work is scanned. Where, for example, the inner surface of a tubular member is to be hardened, an inductor coil of slightly smaller external diameter than the internal diameter of the tube is utilized, and the work is similarly scanned.
,In many instances, the work to be scanned is of such small diameter at the surface to be hardened that the use of an applicator ring or an. inductor coil is not feasible, since coils of small diameter are difllcult to form out of hollow conductor such as are employed with radio frequency currents. Moreover, in some instances, the surfaces to be hardened are not uniform in diameter. For example, in the case of molds em: ployed in the manufacture of small bullets, the mold cavities are both of non-uniform diameter and of too small a diameter even at the widest point to make the use of an inductor coil feasible.
The primary object of my present invention is to provide an improved method of altering the hardnes of metallic members of small size which will not be subject to the above mentioned limitations.
More particularly, it is an biect of my present 55 from the following description of several embodiinvention to provide an improved method of altering the hardness of metallic members having small surface dimensions.
A still more specific object of my present invention is to provide an improved method of hardening the. walls of cavities formed in metallic members, which cavities are too small to accommodate inductor heating coils such as are conventionally used with radio frequency heating methods.
It is also an object .of my present invention to provide an improved method as above set forth which is very simple to carry out and which is highly eilicient in practice.
In accordance with my present invention, the metallic member of which one surface is to be hardened is made to act as one element or conductor of a concentric line, and a radio frequency current i passed through such line. Since radio frequency currents are known to pass along the adjacent surfaces of the elements of a concentric line, it is apparent that the current will pass substantially along the surface to be hardened. Now, if the current is made of sufficient intensity or is supplied at sufficiently high power, it can be made to heat the surface of which the hardness is to be altered with extreme rapidity. For example, if it is desired to harden the wall "urface of a cavity formed in a metallic member, the member may be arranged to act as the outer conductor of a concentric line with the wall of the cavity being the inner surface of said outer conductor. A second conductor, such a a tube of copper or the like which may be water cooled, is placed within the cavity in concentric relation therewith and caused to make contact with the work at the bottom of the cavity. The copper tube is of smaller internal diameter than that of the cavity and forms the inner conductor of the concentric line. Radio frequency current passed through the line will flow along the outer surface of the inner, tubular conductor in one direction, and back along the wall of the cavity in the opposite direction. The current can be made of such intensity that it will rapidly heat only a very thin layer under the wall or surface defining the cavity substantially instantaneously to the temperature requisite for obtaining the desired hardness altration. The novel features that I consider characteristic of my invention are set forth with particularity in the appended claim. The invention itself, however, both as to its organization and method of operation, as well as additional objects and advantages thereof, will best be understood ments thereof, when read in connection with the accompanying drawing, in which Figure 1 is a view partly in section and partly diagrammatic showing one arrangement for practicing my present invention, and
Figure 2 is a similar view showing a slightly different way of practicing this invention.
Referring more particularly to the drawing, wherein similar reference characters designate corresponding parts throughout, there is shown, in Fig. 1, a metallic member i having a cavity 3 therein the surface of which is to be hardened. The member I may be a bullet mold of ferrous metal for molding bullets of small size, say, up to 50 calibre. The cavity 3 is the mold cavity appropriate to the particular bullets to be formed.
Within the cavity 3 is inserted a tubular conductor 5 of copper or the like one end in of which is of reduced diameter for snug reception in an opening 1 formed in the mold i and communicating with the pointed end of the mold cavity 3. Thus, electrical contact is established between the conductor 5 and the mold l. The opening 1 has been shown of relatively large diameter in the drawing for the sake of clearness, but it is to be understood that in practice the diameter thereof will be very small. In any case, the opening 1 is so arranged that when the tubular conductor 5 is inserted therein, the conductor 5 will be coaxial or concentric with the cavity 3. Thus, the mold I forms the outer conductor and the tube 5 the inner conductor of an electrically closed line in the nature of a concentric line.
The concentric line I, 5 is connected through a suitable transformer 9 to a source of high frequency electric energy I I, such as a vacuum tube oscillation generator supplying radio frequency current. When the generator is connected to the concentric line i, 5, the high frequency current passes in one direction along substantially the outer surface of the inner conductor 5 and then in the opposite direction along substantially the surface of the cavity 3. It is desirable that current be supplied at sufficient power to substantially instantaneously heat a very thin layer under the wall of the cavity 3 to the hardening temperature, and the metal of the mold i which backs up the cavity may be utilized for selfquenching in the manner more fully set forth and claimed in the copending application of George H. Brown, Serial No. 421,746, and assigned to Radio Corporation of America. However, if desired, the heated work may be water quenched by simply withdrawing the inner conductor 5 from the cavity 3 while cooling water is flowing therethrough and permitting the water to flow against the heated wall of the cavity.
In one case, where the mold I was made of high carbon steel and was designed for molding 30 calibre bullets, current of approximately 500 kc. per second was supplied to the work at a power of about 70 to 75 kw. per square inch of surface area at the cavity 3 and for a period of about 0.3 second. The power supplied to the work and the the for which it is applied will, of course, depend upon the material of the work and the degree of hardness alteration necessary, but I have found, in general, that the time for which the indicated power is applied should not exceed 0.3 second. Water, air, or other suitable coolant 3 is shaped somewhat may be forced through the hollow conductor 5 "for cooling while the current is flowing in the concentric line.
In the arrangement shown in Fig. 2. the cavity diflerently than in the mold of Fig. 1, and the opening I is omitted. In this case, the inner, tubular conductor 5 may be closed at one end and its closed end my be brought into intimate contact with the apex end of the cavity 3. To maintain the inner conductor 5 in concentric relation with the cavity 3, a suitable supporting bracket i3 may be provided along which the conductor 5 can be slid. A partition l5 within the hollow conductor 5 terminating at a point short of its closed end provides a path for the cooling fluid as indicated by the applied arrows. The operation of this particular arrangement is similar to that described in connection with Fig. 1.
Although I have shown and described two arrangements for practicing the present invention, it will, no doubt, be obvious to those skilledin the art that are possible. For example, if the diameter of the cavity 3 is uniform throughout, as it might be in the case where the work to be treated is of tabular form, the inner conductor 5 might be provided with an outwardly extending circular flange which would be caused to engage the inner wall of the tubular work, and the conductor 5 could then be slid along the support l3 while the flange is in engagement with the inner surface of the work. In this is produced. However, this method of practicing the present invention may not be suitable in some instances, and, in general, the one shot of current metho is preferred in connection with such arangements as are illustrated in the accompanying drawing. Also, where it is desired to alter the hardness of the outer surface of a hollow member, it is obvious. that this member may be made the inner conductor of the concentric line. Many other variations will, no doubt. readily suggest themselves to those skilled in the art. Moreover, while the present invention has been described particularly with reference to' the hardening of surfaces of a ferrous metal, itwill .undoubtedly be apparent to those skilled in the art that it may be practiced equally well where it is desired to anneal certain metals, such as brass, for example. I, therefore, desire that my invention shall not be limited except insofar as is made necessary by the prior art and by the spirit Of the appended claim.
I claim as my invention:
The method of heat treating with the aid of an electrically conductive member the wall surface of a cavity formed in a metallic member, said cavity having a substantially closed inner end, which comprises inserting said first named member into said cavity in concentric relation therewith and bringing the inner end of said first named member into-engagement with the inner end of said cavity whereby to establish electrical connection between said members and thereby provide an electrically closed line in the nature of a concentric line, passing a radio frequency current through said line to effect heating of said wall surface, and thereafter separating said members from each other.
WESLEY M. ROBERDS.
many other ways of practicing it.
way, a scanning efl'ect
US488987A 1943-05-29 1943-05-29 Treatment of metals Expired - Lifetime US2395195A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US488987A US2395195A (en) 1943-05-29 1943-05-29 Treatment of metals

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US488987A US2395195A (en) 1943-05-29 1943-05-29 Treatment of metals

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2395195A true US2395195A (en) 1946-02-19

Family

ID=23941936

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US488987A Expired - Lifetime US2395195A (en) 1943-05-29 1943-05-29 Treatment of metals

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2395195A (en)

Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2455822A (en) * 1944-06-07 1948-12-07 Sunbeam Corp Apparatus for heat-treating metal parts
US2462072A (en) * 1943-12-18 1949-02-22 Utica Drop Forge & Tool Corp Process of inductively heating pliers
US2540219A (en) * 1946-12-19 1951-02-06 Harry B Smith Means for heat-treating and welding metal parts
DE1172784B (en) * 1963-07-27 1964-06-25 Aeg Inductor
US3499804A (en) * 1966-11-07 1970-03-10 Texas Instruments Inc Heat treatment of clad wire or the like
US5006825A (en) * 1987-10-16 1991-04-09 Thomson-Cf Coaxial line coupler with fluid cooled inner conductor
US5514229A (en) * 1993-11-24 1996-05-07 Ramot-University Authority For Applied Research And Industrial Development Ltd., Tel Aviv University Method of producing transparent and other electrically conductive materials

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2462072A (en) * 1943-12-18 1949-02-22 Utica Drop Forge & Tool Corp Process of inductively heating pliers
US2455822A (en) * 1944-06-07 1948-12-07 Sunbeam Corp Apparatus for heat-treating metal parts
US2540219A (en) * 1946-12-19 1951-02-06 Harry B Smith Means for heat-treating and welding metal parts
DE1172784B (en) * 1963-07-27 1964-06-25 Aeg Inductor
US3499804A (en) * 1966-11-07 1970-03-10 Texas Instruments Inc Heat treatment of clad wire or the like
US5006825A (en) * 1987-10-16 1991-04-09 Thomson-Cf Coaxial line coupler with fluid cooled inner conductor
US5514229A (en) * 1993-11-24 1996-05-07 Ramot-University Authority For Applied Research And Industrial Development Ltd., Tel Aviv University Method of producing transparent and other electrically conductive materials
US5795631A (en) * 1993-11-24 1998-08-18 Ramot-University Authority For Applied Research And Industrial Development Ltd. Method of producing transparent and other electrically conductive materials

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2875311A (en) Induction heating in injection and extrusion processes
US2395195A (en) Treatment of metals
US1939712A (en) Treatment of metals and alloys
US2294413A (en) Method of locally heat-treating metal bodies
GB567304A (en) An improved method of and apparatus for hardening metallic articles
US1687656A (en) Heat-treating method
US2303408A (en) Heat treatment of projectiles
US2513778A (en) Heat-treating apparatus
US2164310A (en) Apparatus for hardening
US3257865A (en) Crankshafts
US2401899A (en) Apparatus for treating metal
US2424794A (en) Surface hardening of ferrous metal by self-quenching
US3510619A (en) Apparatus for induction heating
BR8004204A (en) PROCESS FOR THE PRODUCTION OF LARGE OBJECTS WITH PARTICLES IN NON-QUICKLY COOLED BALANCE
US2297878A (en) Method of making hardened composite articles
US2364623A (en) Heat-treating gears and the like
US2256873A (en) Inside induction heater
US2390559A (en) Apparatus for selective heat treatment of metal
US2288033A (en) Method of producing autofrettaged hubs
GB282750A (en) A method and apparatus for hardening substances of iron, steel and other ferro-magnetic materials
US2397990A (en) Induction heating apparatus
US2678371A (en) Heating inductor
US3562030A (en) Method of inductively surface hardening elongated steel workpieces
US2757268A (en) Electrical heating apparatus
US2433627A (en) Treatment of metals