| What Is Annealing? |
|
Annealing is the process of heating the steel to a particular temperature in the austenite region and cooling down the steel very slowly. There are many derivatives of the annealing process, but generally the process is a slow cool process. Another derivative of the annealing process is known as sub-critical anneal. This process involves soaking at a temperature below the lower transformation line, in the region of 1,200xF to 1,300xF, until the steel has equalized across its cross-section in temperature, followed by a slow cool. Slow cooling can mean a cooling rate between 5xF per hour up to 50xF per hour. As can be imagined, the cooling period can be a considerable amount of time. It should be noted that the nickel alloyed steels and the A series tool steels should be cooled very slowly, as nickel will cause an air-hardening effect. Other Types of Annealing: considerable cold working is to follow. annealing. It is used after cold working to produce a specific grain structure. Spheroidize Anneal. This process is a controlled heating and cooling procedure to produce spheroidal or globular cementite particles. It is usually applied on high carbon steels for good machining characteristics such as high alloy steels and tool steels. Isothermal Annealing. The process temperature of this procedure is determined by knowledge of the steel's carbon content. The steel is then taken to that temperature and cooled down to a holding temperature that allows the steel to transform isothermally.
About First-rate Mold Solution Co., Ltd. About www.firstratemold.com |
