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Investigation of the Thermal Stability of Laser Nitrided Iron and Stainless Steel by Annealing Treatments

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Abstract

Laser nitriding has revealed to be a very promising and effective treatment to improve the technical properties, like surface hardness and corrosion-wear resistance, of iron and steels. The high nitrogen concentration, the fastness and precision of the treatment and the easy experimental setup make this technique very suitable for applications on industrial scale. Samples of pure iron and austenitic stainless steel have been irradiated with ns laser pulses in the UV radiation range and analyzed by means of Conversion Electron Mössbauer Spectroscopy (CEMS), Resonant Nuclear Reaction Analysis (RNRA), Grazing Incidence X-Ray Diffraction (GXRD) and Microhardness. Mössbauer Spectroscopy, in particular, is capable of detecting the phase composition of the nitrided layer and therefore represents an essential tool for these kind of analysis. The thermal stability of the treated samples have been investigated by subsequent annealings at increasing temperatures in vacuum and in air. For iron samples the annealing treatment at 250°C shows a rather drastic phase transformation from γ phase (fcc) into γ′ (Fe4N) while a strong depletion of N has been observed for 400°C or higher, regardless of the ambient pressure (atmospheric or vacuum). On the other hand, the stainless steel shows a very good thermal stability up to 500°C, but higher temperatures induce a gradual decrease in the nitrogen concentration which seems to be a common feature for both pure iron and stainless steel. Furthermore, annealing in air leads to the formation of a thin oxide layer on the surface of the iron sample which is easily characterized by Mössbauer spectroscopy.

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Carpene, E., Landry, F., Han, M. et al. Investigation of the Thermal Stability of Laser Nitrided Iron and Stainless Steel by Annealing Treatments. Hyperfine Interactions 139, 355–361 (2002). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021287725293

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1021287725293

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