High-speed laser cladding of chromium carbide reinforced Ni-based coatings

Fusion-bonded and low-diluted overlay welded coatings are frequently very thick (>1mm). High-speed laser cladding is a novel process capable of producing thin fusion-bonded and low-diluted coatings with high coverage rates and low heat input. In this study, for the first time, high-speed laser cladding was used to fabricate relatively thin Ni-based coatings reinforced with chromium carbides onto low-alloy structural and quenched and tempered steels. Obtained coatings were characterized with X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical (OM), and scanning electron microscopy (SEM), as well as electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD). Mechanical and wear properties were tested with Vickers microhardness measurements and three-body dry-sand rubber wheel abrasion tests (RWAT). It was shown that high-speed laser cladding produces 0.2–0.3-mm-thick coatings, which consist of ultrafine-substructured hypereutectic M7C3 structures reinforced with coarser primary Cr3C2 particles. Coatings with hardness up to 1300 HV0.05 exhibited high wear resistance in low-stress three-body abrasion. Coatings developed can be used as alternatives for hard-chrome plated coatings.


Introduction
Fusion-bonded and low-diluted overlay welded coatings typically range from 1 mm to several millimeters in thickness [1], which results in high material consumption (kg/m 2 ) and expenses. Extreme high-speed laser cladding (EHLA) and earlier introduced high-speed laser cladding are methods capable of producing thinner overlay welded coatings [2,3]. Both processes utilize high energy densities using small laser beam spots 1-2 mm in diameter. Instead of plasmatransferred arc (PTA) grade powder (~50-150 μm), the EHLA process uses smaller powder granulometry (~10-60 μm), which enables narrow powder focus. In addition, laser and powder focus locates just above the melt pool in the EHLA process, increasing the energy absorbed by the powder and decreasing the amount of energy absorbed by the base material.
Coating materials utilized in high-speed laser cladding have varied from soft Ni-based superalloys to harder martensitic stainless steels [2][3][4][5][6][7][8]. The ultimate objective has been to develop crack-free alternatives to environmentally hazardous hard-chrome plating [9]. Maximum hardness values reached so far have been limited to ~600 HV, which is clearly lower than those reported for hard-chrome plated coatings 800-1250 HV [10,11]. This could be the reason why wear comparison between hard-chrome and developed EHLA coatings has not been reported yet. Besides the ability to fabricate thin fusion-bonded coatings, the benefits of high-speed laser cladding include high coverage rates (m 2 /h), high solidification rates, low heat input into base material, and high process energy efficiency due to low heat conduction losses. Coverage rate of ~7m 2 /h was recently reached for ~100-μm-thick coating using 8-kW laser power [12]. High solidification rates lead to fine grain structure, which provides hardness increase via grain boundary strengthening. Low heat input diminishes the depth of heataffected zone (HAZ) and distortion.

3
Orthorhombic chromium carbide (Cr 3 C 2 ) is a T m ~1800°C melting point refractory possessing a high degree of chemical stability and is widely used as a reinforcement in overlay welded coatings due to its high hardness [13]. In overlay welding, it typically melts and precipitates as hard hexagonal close-packed (hcp) Cr 7 C 3 and face centered cubic (fcc) Cr 23 C 6 or mixed M 7 C 3 and M 23 C 6 secondary carbides [14][15][16][17][18][19][20][21]. Chromium carbide reinforced overlay welded coatings have been developed, for instance, for cutting knives [22], nuclear reactor components [16], well drilling and oil extraction equipment [19], dies and molds [15], hot rolling mill rolls [20], and boiler tubes [23]. The developed coatings have been found to improve significantly high temperature (HT) sliding wear resistance of cast steels [20], HT oxidation and erosion-corrosion resistance of martensitic stainless steel [15,19], and sliding wear resistance of austenitic stainless steel [18]. Compared to frequently used tungsten, titanium, and vanadium carbides, which are significantly harder than chromium carbides [13], the benefits of chromium carbides include resistance to high temperature oxidation [15,24], and it does not belong to the EU's critical list of materials [25].
The objective of this study was to develop thin and hard (>600 HV) overlay welded coatings by high-speed laser cladding similar to the EHLA process. Powder feedstocks used were Ni-based alloy reinforced with different types and volume fractions of chromium carbides. The obtained coatings were tested with a low-stress three-body abrasion tester.

Materials and methods
The powder feedstocks used for high-speed laser cladding were (1) Amperit®595.074 and (2) mechanical mixtures of Amperit®380 and Metco 70F-NS (56/44 and 83/17 in wt%). Amperit®595.074 is agglomerated and sintered mixture of NiCrMoNb alloy and Cr 3 C 2 in a 50/50 weight ratio with a particle size of 15-45 μm. Powder morphology is spherical and rather porous as displayed in Fig. 1a-b. According to X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis, Amperit®595.074 consists of γ-Ni, Cr 7 C 3 , Cr 3 C 2 , and NbC as illustrated in Fig. 2. In Fig. 1b, darker regions are chromium carbides and lighter regions are Ni-based matrices as revealed by the EDS elemental maps. The size of carbides varied from 1 to 8 μm. Amperit®595.074 was also mechanically mixed with Amperit®380 to make the coating more ductile (Amperit®595.074 + Amperit®380 (77/23 wt%)). Metco 70F-NS is sintered and crushed Cr 3 C 2 powder rather dense and angular in morphology as shown in Fig. 1c-d. It consists of Cr 3 C 2 with the particle size of 5-45 μm. Amperit®380 shown in Fig. 1e is a gas atomized Ni-based alloy with the particle size of 15-45-μm composition corresponding to Inconel 625 [26]. All the mechanical powder mixtures were mixed in the Turbula T2C mixer for 24 h. Theoretical carbon contents and compositions of used powders are given in Ni/CrC volume fractions in Table 1. The base materials employed for the process parameter optimization were S355 and 42CrMo4 rods with a diameter of 100 mm and length of 500 mm. They were in turned condition. 42CrMo4 was quenched and tempered to a hardness of ~300 HV. Wear test specimens were clad on gritblasted plates of S355 with the size of 20 × 20 × 50 mm 3 .
High-speed laser cladding experiments were performed using a continuous wave fiber laser (Coherent C-LASE 3000, Corelase Oy, Finland) with a maximum power of 3 kW. The experimental set-up consisted of a 400-μm fiber, 160-mm collimator unit, f250 optics, a coaxial powder feeding nozzle (Coax14V5 from Fraunhofer IWS), a rotating disc type of powder feeder (Oerlikon Metco Twin 150), and CNC-controlled lathe. Before cladding, turned rods were degreased with ethanol. The varied cladding parameters to produce fusion-bonded coatings with low dilution are summarized in Table 1. Wear test specimens were clamped to a processing table of Fanuc F-200iB parallel kinematic robot keeping the optics and powder feeding nozzle static.
The microstructure of the specimens was studied by applying optical microscopy (OM) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM, Jeol JSM-IT500). The polished coating specimens were etched with a 4% Nital to reveal the HAZ. Energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS) was employed to analyze local chemical compositions and to create elemental maps. Electron back-scattered diffraction (EBSD) was used to detect phases in the microstructure. EBSD specimens were polished using a 0.02-μm colloidal silica suspension. Data acquisition for EBSD was done by using a Zeiss Ultra Plus field emission scanning electron microscope (FESEM) equipped with a Symmetry® EBSD detector (Oxford Instruments). The data was acquired with the step size of 0.7 μm over a 40 μm × 60 μm area by using an acceleration voltage of 15 kV. The collected data was analyzed by using Channel 5 EBSD software. To reveal crystal structures and phases present in the studied materials, an X-ray diffractometer (Panalytical Empyrean Multipurpose Diffractometer) was used. Phase quantifications were made with ImageJ software. Analyzed areas were ~300 × 200 μm 2 for primary carbides and ~30 × 40 μm 2 for secondary carbides. The Vickers microhardness measurements from the coating cross-sections and surfaces were taken with a Matsuzawa MMT-X7 hardness tester using indentation loads of 50 and 1000 g applied for 15 s. Microhardness measurements were also conducted separately on the primary carbides with a load of 50 g.
Three-body abrasion wear tests at room temperature were conducted with a rubber wheel abrasion test device, a modified version of ASTM G65, where crushed dry quartz (SiO 2 ) sand abrasives (0.1-0.6 mm) flow between the surfaces of the rotating rubber wheel (Durometer A84-88) and the test specimen. The test device and parameters are described in more detail in Ref. [27]. Before wear testing, all the laser-clad surfaces were ground with grit #600 and #1200 SiC papers. Commercial hard-chrome plating with the surface hardness of ~950 HV 0.3 was used as a reference material. The worn specimen surfaces were examined by SEM. Wear performance was evaluated as volume loss using theoretical densities for high-speed laserclad coatings and an average density value of 7.05 g/cm 3 found in the literature for the hard-chrome plated coating.

Microstructure
The representative low-magnification OM images of coatings manufactured with process parameters given in Table 1 are illustrated in Fig. 3a-d. Coatings are generally characterized by very low geometrical dilution, narrow HAZ, a thickness of ~0.2-0.3 mm, and varying amounts of vertical cracks, which stop at the fusion line and do not propagate to the base material. These essential coating characteristics, together with some key process characteristics calculated from the coating dimensions, are shown in Table 2. It can be, for instance, seen that cracking tendency is significantly lower in the coatings fabricated from the coarser sintered and crushed chromium carbides (#3, #4) than in the coatings produced from agglomerated and sintered powders (#1, #2). Dilutions/penetrations in the beginning of the clads are locally very high when the laser beam hits to fully exposed base material. Later, when the overlapping starts, i.e., after the first bead, the dilution/penetration remains low. This deep penetration region was included in the geometrical The effective coating thickness given in Table 2 is the minimum coating thickness, i.e., the thickness that remains after the necessary machining operation to get the smooth surface without as-clad remnants [28]. High magnification SEM images shown in Fig. 4 reveal that most of the chromium carbides melted due to a relatively low melting point (~1800°C) and high solubility to nickel matrix and precipitated as needle-like secondary carbides. The amounts of primary and secondary carbides in the coatings are tabulated in Table 3. The volume fractions of primary carbides are significantly higher in coatings fabricated from coarser sintered and crushed chromium carbides (#3, #4) than in coatings made of finer carbides (#1, #2). This was an expected result since coarser carbides offer a smaller surface area to volume ratio than finer carbides making them less vulnerable to melting. This observation of survived primary carbides differs a bit from the results reported in Refs. [23,29], where the complete melting of fine primary carbides made of agglomerated and sintered powder took place in conventional laser cladding. Complete melting can be attributed to a significantly longer interaction time between the laser beam and the material in conventional than in high-speed laser cladding.
Interaction times calculated by beam diameter divided by traverse speed in Refs. [23,29] were 0.125-0.750 s compared to 0.0029 s used in this work. According to XRD scans and EBSD analyses, these secondary needle-like carbides  are mainly Cr 7 C 3 and to a lesser extent Cr 23 C 6 as displayed in Figs. 5 and 6a. According to Gibbs free energy of formation values in the temperature range 700-900°C, Cr 7 C 3 (−140 to −130 kJ/mol) and Cr 23 C 6 (−340 to −320 kJ/mol) are thermodynamically more stable than Cr 3 C 2 (−80 to −70 kJ/mol) [30]. The more abundant existence of M 7 C 3 than M 23 C 6 , which is thermodynamically less stable than M 23 C 6 , can be justified by stoichiometry and kinetics. According to the theoretical chemical compositions of the matrix given in Table 4, carbide former (Cr, Mo, Nb) ratio to carbon is very close to Cr 7 C 3 (= 91.0 wt% Cr, 9.0 wt% C, Cr/C ratio: 91.0/9.0 = 10.1) in coatings #1, #2, and #3. After the solidification of M 7 C 3 , there was not enough time for kinetics-governed diffusion-based M 7 C 3 -> M 23 C 6 transformation due to rapid cooling, which explains the low content of M 23 C 6 . According to an inverse pole figure (IPF) image, there is a strong preferred orientation of grains in the secondary carbides on the right-hand side of the image in Fig. 6b, whereas carbides are more randomly oriented on the left. As evidenced by the EDS analyses, all the structures are hypereutectic except Amperit®380 + 70F-NS (83/17 wt%) (#4), which is hypoeutectic as displayed in Fig. 7a-b. Secondary carbides locate in this hypoeutectic alloy in the interdendritic/columnar regions as shown in Fig. 7b. The structure is very fine exhibiting secondary dendrite arm spacings (λ 2 ) as low as ~0.3 μm, which is orders of magnitude lower than in laser -(3 μm) and cold metal transfer -clad (5 μm) Inconel 625 coatings [31], indicating very high solidification rate [32]. According to a relationship λ 2 = A(dT/dt) −n , where (dT/dt) is cooling rate, A and n are  material-specific constants, and cooling rate of ~21 × 10 6 °C/s was obtained for coating #4 using material constants of 58.02 (A) and 0.312 (n) based on the works of Tinoco and Fredriksson [33]. Coatings #2 and #3 show distinctive hypoeutectic regions (HO) with low secondary carbide content as illustrated well in Fig. 4b and c. According to image analysis, HO regions occupy ~14 vol% in coating #3 and ~3 vol% in coating #2. Such seemingly low carbide content regions were not detected from Amperit®595.074 (#1) coating, which was more homogeneous in structure in that sense. Some coarser structure regions (CSR) can be, however, detected in Amperit®595.074 (#1) in Fig. 4a. They follow the fusion lines of each individual beads, which are overlapped on each other, and originate from the remelting of the thin layer of the previous bead. Thin featureless layer ~3-4 μm in thickness just above the fusion line originates from the planar growth where the G/V s ratio is high. G is thermal gradient (°C/m) and V s (m/s) is solidification speed at the solid-liquid interface. Occasional single aluminum oxide inclusions less than 1 μm in size were also detected from the coatings as displayed in Fig. 6a. Chemical composition profiles throughout the coatings were obtained with EDS area analyses. The analyzed areas were ~20 μm in diameter. They were taken at 40-μm intervals, as shown in Fig. 8. Besides C, Cr, Fe, Ni, Nb, and Mo, EDS also detected a small amount (<1.0 wt%) of Al and Si. Carbon contents in the graphs are somewhat exaggerated because EDS cannot quantify lightweight carbon properly [34]. According to theoretical calculations, total carbon concentrations are supposed to be 6.7 wt% for #1, 5.2 wt% for #2, 5.9 wt% for #3, and 2.3 wt% for #4. In theoretical calculations, it was assumed that NiCrMoNb does not include any carbon and Cr 3 C 2 consists of 86.7 wt% chromium and 13.3 wt% carbon. Average carbon concentrations measured by EDS from the matrix were 8.3 wt% for #1, 7.1 wt% for #2, 7.1 wt% for #3, and 3.2 wt% for #4. Interestingly, matrices of coatings #2 and #3 contain the same amount of carbon. This similarity is due to the severe melting of fine agglomerated and sintered carbides into the matrix. It is also observed that Fe concentrations in all the coatings are below 1.0 wt%, which indicates very low chemical dilution. Inter-mixed Fe is also homogeneously distributed across the coating crosssection, which benefits corrosion performance.

Microhardness
Hardness profiles measured from the coating cross-sections and hardness values measured from the coating surfaces are illustrated in Fig. 9a-b. Average coating hardness values vary from ~500 to ~1250 HV 0.05 Amperit®595.074 (#1) being the hardest and the Amperit®380+Metco 70F-NS (83/17 wt%) (#4) the softest. According to total carbon contents, Amperit®380+Metco 70F-NS (56/44 wt%) (#3) was expected to be harder than Amperit®595.074+Amperit®380 (77/23 wt%) (#2). Instead, it came out that a higher volume fraction of secondary carbides made the latter (#2) harder due to more severe melting of primary carbides. Hardness values were also measured from the coarser primary carbides made of sintered and crushed powder (70F-NS). They were 1250-1350 HV 0.05 being significantly higher than their matrices. Despite apparent brittleness of coatings, none of the coatings exhibited crack initiation from the corners of Vickers pyramid indentation at a load of 1 kg indicating reasonable fracture toughness. Cracks were not detected from the HAZ of 42CrMo4 steel either, even if it hardened strongly. The maximum hardness at HAZ was ~600 HV 0.05 , which is, however, way too high for many applications (power transmission) due to a loss of toughness [35]. The hardness increase of coating #4 near the fusion line in Fig. 9a originates from the indenter partly hit to the unmelted primary Cr 3 C 2 .

Abrasion wear
The rubber wheel abrasion test (RWAT) results are presented in the form of volume losses as a function of time and column chart in Fig. 10a-b. The results are the average of three test runs per studied material. As indicated by the results, the volume removed per unit of sliding time/distance was rather constant throughout the test for each material. It was also found that the differences between different coatings were rather obvious, which suggests that the coatings could be ranked in terms of wear performance. The hardest high-speed laser clad coating, Amperit®595.074 (#1), showed the best while the softest Amperit®380+70F-NS (80/20 vol%) (#4) the worst wear performance. Importantly, the hardest high-speed laser clad coating, Amperit®595.074 (#1), even slightly outperformed or behaved equally with the hard-chrome plated coating in wear resistance.
High magnification SEM images of wear scars are displayed in Fig. 11a-d. The observation of the worn surfaces revealed that the softest coating (~550HV), Amperit®380+70F-NS (80/20 vol%) (#4), showed large wear grooves parallel to the sliding direction caused by micro-ploughing whereas other coatings exhibited only shallow and narrow scratches caused by micro-cutting. The width of the grooves caused by the penetration of hard angular quartz sand particles (~750-1200HV) in the softest coating was ~600 μm. According to criteria H abrasive /H material > 1.2 given in Ref. [11], abrasion conditions were hard for this coating. Wear scar of the softest coating showed also strong signs of plastic deformation   Fig. 11d. It is also seen that occasional primary Cr 3 C 2 particles, even if slightly cracked, exhibited high local wear resistance since they clearly protruded from the matrix. The mean free path between carbides (~290 μm) is, however, too long to prevent the penetration of quartz sand abrasives (0.1-0.6 mm) due to the low volume fraction of primary carbides. Such non-uniform or preferential matrix wear was much less distinctive in the coatings (#1, #2) reinforced with agglomerated and sintered chromium carbides due to a smaller hardness difference between the primary carbide and the matrix.
The addition of a higher volume fraction (50 vs. 20 vol%) of dense sintered and crushed Cr 3 C 2 improved the wear resistance by a factor of three owing to higher hardness (~850 vs. 550 HV) and the shorter mean free path between primary carbides, which was ~230 μm in coating #3. Since most of the abrasives were larger than the mean free path, the primary carbides effectively prevented the penetration of abrasives into the softer matrix in coating #3. The protective effect of primary carbides is clearly seen in Fig. 11c, where the matrix wear is much less behind than in the front of the carbide in relation to the wear/sliding direction.
The significant role of the primary carbides in the prevention of abrasive wear emerges strongly when comparing Amperit®380+70F-NS (50/50 vol%) (#3) and Amperit®380+595.074 (#2) coatings. Despite higher  hardness (~930 vs. 850 HV), Amperit®380+595.074 (#2) suffered from significantly higher wear loss due to a lower volume fraction of primary carbides (0.8 vs. 3.6 vol%) and the higher mean free path between carbides (~530 vs. ~230 μm). This finding suggests that the volume fraction of primary carbides should be increased in the coating, for instance, by using 20-45-μm carbide granulometry instead of the 5-45 μm used in this study. The excellence of Amperit®595.074 (#1) is based simply on hardness, which is very close to that of abrasive. High-volume fraction of M 7 C 3 chromium carbide is known to be effective particularly in low-stress abrasion conditions [36]. High hardness of M 7 C 3 evidently originates from the hcp structure and its low c/a ratio of 0.32 [29], where c and a are lattice parameters.

Discussion
The results showed that high-speed laser cladding can produce relatively thin (0.2-0.3 mm) overlays of Ni-based coatings reinforced with chromium carbides, which are equal to hard-chrome plating in wear resistance. Compared to hard-chrome plated coatings, high-speed laser-clad coatings possess a fusion bond, which is a great benefit and enables the use of coatings also in highly stressed applications where strong adhesion/bonding is required. When considering corrosion protection, the relatively high crack density (5.2 mm −1 ) in the hardest and the most wear-resistant high-speed laser-clad coatings, as well as in any other available to-date coatings, is obviously a drawback. Interconnected cracks allow corrosive liquids, fumes, and gases to penetrate to the less noble base material and corrode it quickly. On the other hand, thick and hard hard-chrome plated coatings exhibit the same problem [37]. According to Ref. [38], hard-chromes thicker than 10 μm form interconnected macrocracks reaching the base material. Besides macrocracks, hardchrome plated coatings contain microcracks, which do not initially reach the base material. As was shown in Ref. [38], there is a correlation between microcrack density and microhardness. The harder the hard-chrome plated coating is, the higher the microcrack density appears. Microcrack densities as high as 30-40 mm −1 were reported for hard-chrome plated coating ~950 HV in hardness in Ref. [38]. Interconnected cracks lead to rapid deterioration under corrosive environments as was shown in Refs. [39,40]. Beneficial effects of cracks include relaxation of residual stresses and working as oil pockets in lubricating applications.
In high-speed laser-clad coatings, the cracks encountered in this study are the type of brittle cracks. They evolve during fast cooling when the hot coating material tries to undergo shrinkage but is prevented by the constraints imposed by the relatively cool and rigid base material and the previous bead. If the resulting shrinkage or thermal stresses exceed the ultimate tensile strength of the coating material and all the deformability/ductility is used up, brittle cracks perpendicular to the coating/base material interface develop relieving tensile residual stresses. The magnitude of these shrinkage or thermal stresses can be roughly estimated in a fully restrained situation with equation [41]: where σ th is shrinkage stress (MPa), E is Young's modulus (GPa), α CTE is coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) (K −1 ), and ΔT 1 is the difference between melting temperature and base material during processing (K). Roughly estimated, the amount of shrinkage stress in the fully restrained situation could be in the order of ~3500 MPa for coating 50NiCrMoNb-50Cr 7 C 3 in vol% using the values of E Cr7C3 = 295 GPa [42], E NiCrMoNb = 208 GPa, α CTE (Cr 7 C 3 ) = 6.2 × 10 −6 K −1 (20-100°C) [42], α CTE (NiCrMoNb) = 12.8 × 10 −6 K −1 (20-100°C), and ΔT 1 = 1500°C. Additional stresses form during further cooling due to the CTE difference between the coating and base material. The magnitude of these stresses can be estimated with an equation (even if it assumes that the coating and base material are both at the same temperature) [43]: where σ is stress (MPa), CTE c coefficient of thermal expansion for coating (K −1 ), CTE s coefficient of thermal expansion for base material (K −1 ), T 2 heat treatment or process temperature (°C), T 1 room temperature (°C), E c Young's modulus of coating (GPa), and ν c Poisson's number of coating. The equation suggests that forming stresses are tensile if CTE c is higher than CTE s and compressive if CTE c is lower than CTE s . Assuming that CTE for steels is 12.0 × 10 −6 K −1 (20-300°C) and for 50NiCrMoNb-50Cr 7 C 3 in vol% 9.5 × 10 −6 K −1 (20-100°C), forming stress caused by CTE difference would be compressive counteracting against the tensile stresses caused by the shrinkage stress. Both equations (1 and 2) also suggest that preheating or elevated cladding temperature has beneficial effect on developing stresses. In high-speed laser cladding, where the base material temperature remains low, residual stresses are presumably higher than in conventional laser cladding, which negatively affect brittle cracking in hardfacing alloys and hot cracking in softer alloys.
Therefore, future research directions need to focus on decreasing the crack density. Preheating and elevated cladding temperatures should be studied by using, for instance, a closed-looped induction heater [44]. Chromium carbide size distribution should preferably be narrowed from 5 to 45 μm, for instance, to 20-45 μm to prevent excessive melting of carbides and embrittlement of the matrix. Other techniques to improve corrosion resistance are likely to include the use of a thin undercoat fabricated from ductile corrosion-resistant alloy by high-speed laser cladding and the use of sealers to fill in the cracks in a hardfaced layer. Obvious brittleness of coatings sets also needs to study the properties of coatings also in different wear modes such as erosion, high-stress, and impact-abrasion, sliding wear, and determination of coefficient of friction.

Conclusions
In the present study, low-diluted and fusion-bonded Ni-based coatings reinforced with different types and volume fractions of chromium carbides were fabricated by the high-speed laser cladding process potentially to replace the hard-chrome plated coatings. After microstructural characterization, microhardness measurements, and wear tests, the following conclusions can be drawn: 1. Fabricated coatings are ~200-300 μm in thickness microhardness varying from 500 to 1300 HV 0.05 . Most of the added chromium carbides (Cr 3 C 2 ) are melted in the process and precipitated as hard and wear-resistant M 7 C 3 carbides forming hypoeutectic and hypereutectic structures. 2. Larger sintered and crushed chromium carbides are more likely to remain unmelted than finer agglomerated and sintered chromium carbides, which makes the coating more metal matrix composite (MMC) like and decreases the susceptibility for embrittlement and cracking. 3. The hardest high-speed laser clad coating exhibited the wear resistance equivalent to hard-chrome plated coating in a low-stress three-body abrasion wear test.
Funding Open access funding provided by Tampere University including Tampere University Hospital, Tampere University of Applied Sciences (TUNI). This research was funded by the European Regional Development Fund, grant number A78522. The project "Fast coating method -Benefits for the industry" is funded by the React-EU Instrument as part of the European Union's response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

Conflict of interest
The authors declare no competing interests.
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