Technical Report 1 1999
Technical Report 1 1999
Technical Report 1 1999
Approved by:
Doug McCoy Date: 2006-10-26
(Process owner)
Local Edition:
Language:
Author:
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Changes in relation to previous issue are written with red, alternatively for figures and
Side 2 af 34
GLOBAL STANDARD
1 CONTENTS
2. Scope
3. Purpose
4. Related Documents
5. Equipment and Pyrometry
6. General Heat-Treat Requirements
7. Through-Hardening
8. Gas Carburizing
9. Gas Nitriding
10. Carbonitriding
11. Gaseous Nitrocarburizing
12. Salt Bath Nitrocarburizing
13. Induction Hardening
14. Hydrogen Embrittlement Relief
15. Heat-Treat Personnel Qualifications
16. Testing Requirements
17. Test Report Requirements
18. General Operating System Requirements
19. Appendix A: General Notes
20. Appendix B: Thickness Limits for Surface Hardness
Measurements of Surface Treated Materials
21. Appendix C: Case Depth Determination According to DIN 50190
22. Appendix D: Chart Showing Visual Estimation of Per Cent
Retained Austenite
2 SCOPE
This standard establishes general requirements for heat treatment of
steel parts by Sauer-Danfoss heat-treat sites and Sauer-Danfoss
suppliers and forms an integral part of Sauer-Danfoss detail
specifications and engineering prints. When there is a conflict
between this standard and the detail specification or the drawing,
the drawing shall take precedence first and the detail specification
second. Global standards for SQA’s, PPAP’s, and PFMEA’s are an
important and integral part of high quality heat treatment, but are
not within the scope of this document.
3 PURPOSE
This standard specifies the minimal requirements for inspection
methods, process controls, heat-treat equipment, and general
operating procedures necessary to produce heat treated parts free
from defects. This standard is intended as a supplement to the
industry standards referenced throughout this document. As a
standard, the practices defined in this document should be
considered as requirements for Sauer-Danfoss and external heat
treating facilities. In cases where a U.S. standard is specifically
cited, an equivalent European standard may be substituted.
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4 RELATED DOCUMENTS
The following documents are referenced herein:
SAE and AMS Publications are available from SAE, 400
Commonwealth Drive, Warrendale, PA 15096-0001.
ASTM Publications are available from ASTM, 100 Barr Harbor Drive,
West Conshohocken, PA 19428-2959.
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Treatment
AMS 2759 DIN 17022-1
Practice of Heat Treatment
AMS 2759 DIN 17014-3
Heat-Treat Processes of Iron
Materials
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Heating Equipment
Automatic temperature controllers and data recording instruments
conforming to AMS 2750 (DIN/EN 3452) are required on each
furnace. Instrumentation, thermocouples, test equipment accuracy
shall conform to AMS 2750 (DIN/EN 3452). Equipment which
cannot be controlled and tested in accordance with AMS 2750
(DIN/EN 3452) shall be controlled and tested as directed by
Metallurgy.
Quenching Equipment
Quench baths shall permit complete immersion of parts, shall have a
temperature indicator with a sensor in the quench media, and shall
be free from visible contamination, which could detrimentally affect
the process. Tanks with oil should be equipped with a device forcing
oil circulation for better heat exchange during quenching. Bath
maintenance programs shall be established and when using
polymers, a concentration control system shall be established.
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Quenching Media
Except when marquenching, the temperature of the bath shall insure
the proper cooling speed to produce a microstructure that will meet
property requirements of the final part specification.
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Soaking
Soaking shall commence when the control thermocouple reaches the
specified set temperature.
Tempering
Tempering shall occur within 4 hours of quench. Soaking time shall
not be less than 2 hours plus one hour additional for each inch of
thickness or fraction thereof greater than 1 inch. Parts may be snap
tempered for 2 hours at a temperature that is lower than the
tempering temperature.
Straightening
For parts having a minimum tensile strength below 180 KSI (40 Rc)
or 1241 MPa (392 VHN), straightening may be accomplished without
stress relieving. For parts having a minimum tensile strength of 180
KSI (1241 MPa) or above and straightened at room temperature,
straightening shall be followed by stress relieving at a temperature
not higher than 50 °F (28 °C) below the tempering temperature.
Cleaning
The heat-treat department should receive clean parts. Parts shall be
cleaned prior to heat treatment only if it is necessary to remove
contaminants that could have a deleterious effect on the surface
visual appearance, surface microstructure, or part performance.
Cleaning after heat treatment (quenching) should be performed as
necessary to ensure the parts meet cleanliness requirements.
Masking
Coatings or plating used for the protection of surfaces during heat
treatment shall be approved by Metallurgy. The type of masking
used shall be reviewed to ensure that the furnace atmosphere is not
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Spacing/Racking
Parts shall be racked and supported primarily to ensure access of the
heating atmosphere and quenching media to all surfaces of all parts
and secondarily to minimize distortion.
7 THROUGH-HARDENING
Quenching and Tempering
Quenching and tempering shall be in accordance with ASTM 2759/1
and ASTM 2759/2. The heating atmosphere shall be neutral to the
surface of the steel being treated to prevent decarburization or
carburization of the steel surface.
Decarburization
For parts heat treated to 220 KSI (46 Rc) or 1517 MPa (458 VHN)
and above, the depth of decarburization (complete decarb is not
permitted) after all heat-treat operations shall not exceed 0.003
inches (0.08 mm) on any surface. For parts heat treated to less than
220 KSI (46 Rc) or 1517 MPa (458 VHN), the depth of partial
decarburization (complete decarburization not permitted) after all
heat-treat operations, shall not exceed 0.005 inches (0. 13 mm).
The depth of decarburization shall be determined by making a
microhardness traverse per ASTM E384 (DIN 50190 1-3), using at
least 250X magnification and recording hardness versus depth below
the surface. The boundary of decarburization shall be the point at
which the Knoop or equivalent hardness is 20 points (approximately
18 VHN points) less than the base hardness.
Carburization or nitriding
In through-hardened parts, furnace atmospheres which increase the
Carbon content of surfaces above the maximum for the respective
composition and/or increase the surface hardness 20 points Knoop or
equivalent (approximately 18 VHN points) above the core hardness,
are not acceptable. In addition, the microstructure shall not show
any evidence of carburization or nitriding.
Intergranular attack
Intergranular oxidation, as determined by metallographically etching
specimens, shall not exceed .0005 inches (0.013 mm) on parts heat
treated to 220 KSI (46 Rc) or 1517 MPa (458 VHN) and above, and .
0007 inches (0.018 mm) on parts heat treated to less than 220 KSI
(46 Rc) or 1517 MPa (458 MPa).
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Core hardness
Core hardness shall be determined in the most massive or functional
section of the part unless specified otherwise.
8 GAS CARBURIZING
Gas carburizing shall be in accordance with AMS 2759/7 (DIN
17022-3).
Case Microstructure
Retained austenite shall not exceed 15% unless specified otherwise
on the engineering print or heat-treat process instructions. Retained
austenite shall be determined by visual comparison (See Appendix
D: Martensite/Austenite Chart) unless x-ray diffraction is required
by the engineering print or heat-treat process instructions. When x-
ray diffraction is required, the method used shall be agreed upon
between the heat-treater and the customer. Intergranular (grain
boundary) carbides shall be scattered and discontinuous and shall
not be evident in more than (30%) of the grain boundaries (See
Photograph 5.2 in SEP 1520). Case microstructure shall be
predominantly tempered martensite. Intergranular oxidation shall
not exceed 0.0005 inches (0.013 mm) in depth from the unmachined
surfaces.
Case Hardness
Case hardness shall be 58-62 Rc (653-746 VHN) and shall be
determined in accordance with ASTM E18 (EN 6508 -1,2,3) on the
carburized and hardened surface of the finished part using a
superficial hardness test appropriate for the depth of case specified
(See Appendix B).
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polished and etched (4% nital) sample when the core hardness
exceeds 45 Rc (446 VHN). In applying the optical method, the
effective case depth shall be defined as the depth of the midpoint of
the microstructural transition zone laying between the higher carbon
outer surface and the low carbon core.
Quenching
Parts may be direct quenched (cooled to austenitizing temperature
prior to quenching) rather than being slow cooled to room
temperature and rehardened.
Selective Carburizing
Selective carburizing may be accomplished by masking. Unless
specified otherwise, threaded ends of shafts shall be masked prior to
carburizing.
9 GAS NITRIDING
Gas nitriding shall be in accordance with AMS 2759/6 (DIN 17022-4).
Equipment
Equipment shall be available for introducing ammonia into the
furnace at a controlled rate. A separate system for ammonia
dissociation is recommended. Where ammonia dissociation is used,
the equipment shall be capable of maintaining the atmosphere within
+/- 5% of the selected percent dissociation.
Decarburization/Contamination
Surfaces to be nitrided shall be free from decarburization and
contaminants such as grease, oil, and scale, which could interfere
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Stress Relieving
Unless otherwise specified, parts which have been ground or
otherwise mechanically worked after hardening, shall be stress
relieved prior to nitriding. The stress relieving temperature shall not
be greater than 50°F (28 °C) below the tempering temperature
(where applicable).
Nitriding Temperature
Unless specified otherwise, the nitriding temperature range shall be
940-1050 °F (504-566 °C) and should not be greater than 50°F (28
°C) below the tempering temperature.
Microstructure
The microstructure shall exhibit a uniform distribution of nitrides
diminishing gradually from the surface to the core. There shall be no
evidence of a continuous nitride network in grain boundaries.
Unless otherwise specified, the maximum thickness of the compound
zone (white layer) shall be 0.001 inches (25 m).
Case Depth
Unless otherwise specified, case depth requirements shall be
interpreted as either total case depth (compound + diffusion zone) or
depth of the compound zone only. Total case depth is the depth of
the continuous etching subsurface zone, determined
metallographically on the as-nitrided part using 4% nital etching
solution. On those materials that do not respond to etching, the total
case depth is the depth below the surface at which microhardness is
50 HVN higher than that of the core, as determined by a Knoop or
Vickers hardness traverse, in accordance with ASTM E 384.
Effective case depth, where specified, shall be in accordance with
drawing requirements and is the depth to which a specified hardness
in accordance with ASTM E 384 or DIN 50190-2 is attained. Case
depth defined by DIN 50190-2 is core hardness + 50HV0.5 (See
Appendix C).
Surface Hardness
Surface hardness shall be determined by Rockwell superficial
hardness or microhardness in accordance with ASTM E 18, ASTM E
92, or ASTM E 384 (EN 6056 -1,2,3 or DIN 50190 -1,2,3). See
Appendix B for description of thickness limits versus hardness
method and test load. Compound zone hardness may be verified
with the use of hardened files calibrated in increments of 5 points Rc
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10 CARBONITRIDING
Microstructure
Case microstructure shall be in accordance with the requirements of
gas carburizing in section 8. Additionally, excessive nitride needles
shall not be present when examined at a magnification of 500X.
11 GASEOUS NITROCARBURIZING
Gaseous nitrocarburizing shall be in accordance with AMS 2757
(DIN 17022-4) and shall consist of a continuous thin epsilon-iron-
carbonitride compound layer. Basically, the nitrocarburizing process
is a thermochemical treatment carried out in a gaseous media, which
involves diffusional additions of both nitrogen and carbon to the
surface of ferrous materials at temperatures within the stress relief
range. The primary objective is to provide an improved wear and
fatigue resistant surface to carbon steel, alloy steel, and cast iron
parts. Because the tempering is carried out at temperatures below
1200°F (649°C), retention of core properties and good dimensional
control are achieved. An additional benefit of improved corrosion
resistance, through the formation of a continuous compound layer on
the surface, can eliminate the need for protective plating.
Hardening
Parts where core hardening is specified shall be tempered at a
temperature not less than
50 °F (28 °C) above the nitrocarburizing temperature.
Stress Relieving
Parts which have been machined or straightened prior to
nitrocarburizing, may be stress relieved at a temperature not less
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Quenching
A range of properties can be obtained by controlling the rate of
cooling from the treatment temperature. Parts may be quenched in
oil, water, soluble oil solutions, aqueous polymer solutions, inert or
nitrocarburizing atmospheres, or air.
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13 INDUCTION HARDENING
Induction hardening is a process in which high frequency
electromagnetic radiation is coupled to the steel part, producing
induced currents that cause the heating in the steel. Heating of the
steel does not occur just on the surface, but also in the surface
layers. The depth of heating is related inversely to the frequency, in
that higher frequency produces heating to a shallower depth.
The primary objective of induction heating is to provide an improved
wear and fatigue resistant surface for carbon steel, alloy steel, and
cast iron parts. This is accomplished by heating above the AC3 and
quenching to produce a hardened surface and an accompanying
residual compressive surface layer.
The equipment used to heat-treat a component shall be fully capable
of processing the part with adequate controls on power levels, heat
times, quench times, quench temperature, and other key processing
parameters.
Surface Hardness
The surface hardness specified on the engineering print shall be
measured directly on the part surface in accordance with ASTM E18
(EN 6508 – 1,2,3), using the appropriate hardness scale compatible
with the induction hardened depth. See Appendix B for description
of thickness limits versus hardness method and test load. Surface
hardness may also be measured on a sectioned sample at .003 inches
(0.075 mm) per ASTM E384 (DIN 50190-3).
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Depth of Hardening
The case depth specified on the engineering print or heat-treat
specification will normally be described in terms of the depth at
which a minimum hardness is attained in accordance with
microhardness testing per ASTM E384 (DIN 50190-3). Effective case
is defined as the depth at which the hardness is 10 points Rc
(approximately 120 VHN) less than the required minimum surface
hardness (or 80% of the required minimum surface hardness as per
DIN 50190-3) - See Appendix C. For example, for high carbon steel
with a minimum surface hardness requirement of 60 Rc (697 VHN),
50 Rc (513 VHN) defines the effective case depth. For medium
carbon steels with a minimum surface hardness requirement of 50
Rc (513 VHN), 40 Rc (392 VHN) defines the effective case depth.
Total case depth, if required, is the depth at which core
microstructure characteristics and case microstructure
characteristics can no longer be differentiated. Total case depth may
also be defined as the depth at which the hardness gradient exceeds
the core hardness by 50 HV0.5Kg (approximately 5 Rc).
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Tempering
Parts shall be tempered at a minimum temperature of 351 °F (177
°C). Although not the preferred method, induction tempering is
allowed provided a suitable method has been demonstrated to
achieve the print hardness requirement. Timing between induction
hardening and tempering is critical, but it can vary by application.
The time should be controlled to avoid cracking.
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Parts to be Baked
Hydrogen relief baking is applicable to parts made from carbon, low-
alloy steel, and martensitic stainless steel (including precipitation
hardened stainless) heat treated to a minimum strength of 180 KSI
(1241 MPa) or heat treated to a minimum hardness of 40 Rc (392
VHN) or equivalent. It is also applicable to threaded fasteners heat
treated to a minimum strength of 150 KSI (1034 MPa) or 34 Rc (336
VHN) or equivalent hardness, and steel parts which have been
surfaced hardened (carburized, nitrided, carbonitrided,
nitrocarburized, or induction hardened). Supplier should be aware
that parts with a minimum strength even as low as 117 KSI (800
MPa) or minimum hardness of 22 Rc (250 VHN) may be susceptible
to hydrogen embrittlement and should take proper precautions.
Baking Requirements
Parts shall be baked after completion of each plating or other
chemical process in accordance with the requirements of Table 1 of
AMS 2759/9. Baking is not required between steps in a multiple step
(plating/chemical process) sequence if interruptions do not exceed 2
hours, baking is started within 4 hours after the final step, and total
time between start of first step and start of baking does not exceed
24 hours. When baking is required between steps, the minimum
soaking time may be reduced to 3 hours for parts 240 KSI (1655
MPa) or a minimum of 49 Rc (498 VHN) or equivalent. For higher
strength parts the soaking time shall be a minimum of 6 hours.
Nickel plated parts are an exception and shall be soaked for the
required times of Table 1 of AMS 2759/9 for parts heat treated to a
minimum strength of 200 KSI (1379 MPa).
Baking Procedure
The elapsed time between completion of plating or other chemical
processing and baking shall not exceed 4 hours.
The standard baking temperature is 375 °F (191 °C). The baking
temperature for parts that are carburized or carbonitrided shall be
275 °F (135 °C). The baking temperature for parts made from 52100
and 440C that have been heat treated to a minimum strength of 220
KSI (1517 MPa) or a minimum hardness of 46 Rc (458 VHN) shall be
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300°F (149 °C). The baking temperature for parts made from music
wire is 325 °F (163 °C).
Minimum baking times shall conform to Table 1 of AMS 2759/9.
Typical baking times are either 8 hours or 23 hours depending on
material, how material is processed, and plating process or chemical
treatment.
16 TESTING REQUIREMENTS
Testing Capabilities and Requirements
Heat treating facilities shall have the testing equipment necessary to
perform the tests to verify conformance to requirements. Those
measurements that are performed infrequently may be sourced to an
outside laboratory.
Preproduction tests
Prior to the first shipment of a new part number, a significant
process or product change, or shipment of a previously existing part
number to a new customer, the appropriate testing should be
performed as per the design specification (and PPAP material test
requirements) to verify the appropriate material and process to meet
the application intent.
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Periodic Tests
Periodic tests shall be performed at a frequency selected by the heat-
treater (as per control plan) unless frequency of testing is specified
otherwise by the engineering print. Unless specified otherwise, the
following are required periodic tests for each of these processes
(Note that part or parts selected for examination shall be after all
thermal processes have been completed):
Through-Hardening: Core microstructure.
Gas Carburizing: Core hardness; core microstructure.
Gas Nitriding: Core hardness; thickness of compound zone.
Carbonitriding: Core hardness; core microstructure.
Gaseous Nitrocarburizing: Compound layer microstructure;
diffusion zone hardness; diffusion zone depth.
Salt Bath Nitrocarburizing: Compound layer microstructure;
diffusion zone hardness; diffusion zone depth.
Induction Hardening: Core hardness; core microstructure.
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3. A lot (other then for induction hardening – see note 4 below) shall
be all parts of the same part number processed in the same
furnace load. See also section 4.3.2 of AMS 2759 (see Table 4.1
for DIN equivalent): a lot shall be all parts of the same design,
fabricated from the same alloy, heat treated to the same property
requirements in the same furnace(s) at the same time, and
presented for processor’s inspection at the same time. In addition,
for a continuous furnace, it shall be those parts heat treated as a
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5. Heat Affected Zone (HAZ): The heat affected zone is the depth
below the hardened surface which last exhibits microstructural
evidence of having exceeded the lower critical temperature (Ac1)
and/or that portion of the base metal within which microstructural
and physical properties were altered by the treatment.
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20 APPENDIX B:
Thickness Limits for Surface Hardness Measurements of
Surface Treated Materials
Table 1
Thickness Limits for Surface Hardness Measurement Using Vickers
(Basis is DIN 6773)
Minimum Surface Hardness and Vickers Test Load
Min. Case 200-300 >300-400 >400-500 >500-600 >600-700 >700-800 >800 (HV)
Depth, (HV) (HV) (HV) (HV) (HV) (HV)
Rht,Eht,
Nht, (mm)*
0,05 - - - HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5
0,07 - HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 1 HV 1
0,08 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 1 HV 1 HV 1
0,09 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 0,5 HV 1 HV 1 HV 1 HV 1
0,1 HV 0,5 HV 1 HV 1 HV 1 HV 1 HV 1 HV 3
0,15 HV 1 HV 1 HV 3 HV 3 HV 3 HV 3 HV 5
0,2 HV 1 HV 3 HV 5 HV 5 HV 5 HV 5 HV 5
0,25 HV 3 HV 5 HV 5 HV 5 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10
0,3 HV 3 HV 5 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10
0,4 HV 5 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10 HV 30 HV 30
0,45 HV 5 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10 HV 30 HV 30 HV 30
0,5 HV 10 HV 10 HV 10 HV 30 HV 30 HV 30 HV 30
0,55 HV 10 HV 10 HV 30 HV 30 HV 30 HV 50 HV 50
0,6 HV 10 HV 10 HV 30 HV 30 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50
0,65 HV 10 HV 30 HV 30 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50
0,7 HV 10 HV 30 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50
0,75 HV 30 HV 30 HV 50 HV 50 HV 50 HV 100 HV 100
0,8 HV 30 HV 30 HV 50 HV 50 HV 100 HV 100 HV 100
0,9 HV 30 HV 30 HV 50 HV 100 HV 100 HV 100 HV 100
1,0 HV 30 HV 50 HV 100 HV 100 HV 100 HV 100 HV 100
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Table 2
Thickness Limits for Surface Hardness Measurement Using Rockwell and
Rockwell Superficial (Basis is DIN 6773)
Minimum Surface Hardness for Rockwell and Rockwell Superficial Test Loads
Min. 82-85 >85-88 >88 60-68 >68-73 >73-78 >78 >44-54 >54-61 >61-67 >67
Case (HR 15N) (HR15N) (HR15N) (HR30N) (HR30N) (HR30N) (HR30N) (HR45N (HR45N (HR45N (HR45N)
Depth,
Rht, Eht,
(mm)*)
0,1 - - HR15N - - - - - - - -
0,15 - HR15N HR15N - - - - - - - -
0,2 HR15N HR15N HR15N - - - HR30N - - - -
0,25 HR15N HR15N HR15N - - HR30N HR30N - - - -
0,35 HR15N HR15N HR15N - HR30N HR30N HR30N - - - HR45N
0,4 HR15N HR15N HR15N HR30N HR30N HR30N HR30N - - HR45N HR45N
0,5 HR15N HR15N HR15N HR30N HR30N HR30N HR30N - HR45N HR45N HR45N
>0,55 HR15N HR15N HR15N HR30N HR30N HR30N HR30N HR45N HR45N HR45N HR45N
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21 APPENDIX C:
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CHANGE HISTORY:
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