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At present there are two basically different production methods which together account for
more than 90% of the world production of iron and steel powders, viz. The Hgans spongeiron process and the water-atomizing process. The former process is based on reduction of
iron ore, yielding a highly porous sponge-iron which subsequently is comminuted to powder.
The latter process is based on atomization of a stream of liquid iron (or steel) by means of a
jet of pressurized water.
In the manufacturing of sintered parts, iron powders are always used admixed with a small
amount of lubricant in powder form in order to minimize the friction in the compacting tool. In
many cases, they are also blended with alloying elements in powder form, like graphite,
copper, nickel, molybdenum and others (in order to achieve increased strength properties).
The Hgans Sponge Iron Process
The Hgans sponge iron process, is essentially a chemical process in which finely divided
iron ore is being reduced with coke breeze yielding a spongy mass of solid metallic iron,
which can readily be comminuted to iron powder. The iron ore used at Hgans is a
magnetite (powder Fe3O4) obtained from selected sources. This magnetite, which by nature
contains only very small amounts of gang and has extremely low contents of sulfur and
phosphorus, is being dressed and concentrated while still at the mining location and then
delivered to Hgans in a highly pure state.
The Hgans Water-Atomizing Process
The raw material for this process is a carefully selected iron scrap and sponge iron from the
process described in the preceding paragraph. This raw material (1) is melted down in an
electric arc furnace of 50 tons capacity (2) where, if desired, alloying elements can be added.
The melt is teemed slag-free through a bottom hole into a ladle (3) where it is refined with an
oxygen lance (4). The ladle is then transferred to the atomizing station (5), and the liquid iron
(or steel) is teemed slag-free through a bottom hole in the ladle into a specially designed
tundish (A).
From there, the liquid iron (or steel) flows in a well controlled stream (B) through the center of
a ring-shaped nozzle (D) where it is hit by jets of highly pressurized water (C). The stream of
liquid iron (or steel) explodes into fine droplets (E). Some of these droplets freeze immediately
to small spheres, others unite in small irregularly shaped agglomerates while freezing. Air,
swept along by the water jet, and water vapor arising in the atomizing process, cause
superficial oxidation of the small droplets. The solidified droplets and the atomizing water are
collected in a huge container, where they are settling as a mud. This powder mud is dewatered (6) and dried (7). The dry powder is magnetically separated from slag particles (8),
screened (9) and homogenized (10), and eventually transported in special containers (11) to
the works at Hgans for further processing.
In the state as leaving the atomizing plant, the atomized powder particles are not only
superficially oxidized but also very hard because, due to the extremely high cooling rates
residing in the atomizing process, they have solidified in the martensitic state despite their
low carbon content.
The powder is, therefore, soft-annealed, and its surface oxides and residual carbon are
reduced in belt furnaces. Routines for homogenizing, quality checking, packaging and storing
are the same as for sponge iron powders.
Alloying Methods
In order to achieve hardenable sintered ferrous materials, carbon and other suitable alloying
elements, like e.g. copper, nickel, and molybdenum, have to be introduced.
While carbon is normally admixed to the iron powder in the form of graphite, metallic alloying
elements are commonly introduced by either of the following two methods:
Method 1: Water atomization of the liquid iron alloy, resulting in a homogeneously alloyed
powder.
Method 2: Mechanically blending plain iron powder with the respective alloying elements in
powder form, and letting the actual alloying process take place during sintering of the parts
compacted from the powder mix. Both methods have their advantages and disadvantages:
Homogeneously alloyed powders:
Advantages:
Alloying elements do not segregate when the powder is handled .
Yield fully homogeneously alloyed sintered parts.
Disadvantages:
Have low compressibility, because their particles are solution-hardened.
In order to change or correct the composition of a fully alloyed powder, if ever so little, a new
melt (usually 50 tons at time) will have to be atomized.
Powder mixes.
Advantages:
Have higher compressibility.
No additional mixing operation is required as the powder has to be admixed with a lubricant
anyway.
The composition of a powder mix can very easily be changed or corrected by re-mixing it
with additional amounts of either iron powder or alloying elements.
Disadvantages:
Yield less homogeneously alloyed sintered parts, because the admixed alloying elements
(except carbon) diffuse very slowly in solid iron.
Alloying elements tend to segregate when the powder mix is transported and handled.
Distaloy and Starmix
In order to eliminate the segregation problem with powder mixes, Hgans AB has developed
two special processes for the production of segregation-proof iron powder mixes. A large
variety of standard and tailor-made powder mixes produced according to these processes are
offered under the trade-names Distaloy and Starmix.
The Distaloy process can be described as follows:
Alloying elements used in the Distaloy process are mainly copper, nickel and molybdenum
(but not graphite!) in the form of very finely grained powders. The process starts with
weighing-in a production lot of 30 tons of iron powder and alloying powders in exactly
controlled proportions. This lot is mixed in a double-cone mixer. Special precautions are taken
to prevent segregation of the mix when discharged from the mixer.
The so produced powder mix is heat-treated in a continuous furnace under a reducing
atmosphere at a temperature somewhat below the melting point of the lowest melting alloying
element. During this heat-treatment, the fine particles of the added alloying elements are
safely bonded to the surfaces of the coarser iron powder particles.
Due to inter-diffusion between the diffusion bonded alloying particles and the iron particles,
the latter become, to a certain extend, locally pre-alloyed. The so treated powder mix contains
the alloying additives as finely and evenly dispersed as possible . The fact that the iron
powder particles are locally pre-alloyed has practically no negative effect on the
compressibility of the mix.
Graphite and lubricants have to be excluded from the Distaloy process because, during
heat-treatment of the powder mix, graphite would carbonize the iron particles and spoil the
compressibility of the powder mix, and lubricants would burn-off.
The Starmix process uses special types of organic binders to glue graphite and lubricants to
the iron powder particles during the mixing procedure.
General aspects
Iron and steel powders - as well as other metal powders - used in the production of sintered
parts can be characterized by three categories of properties:
1. Metallurgical properties
chemical composition and impurities
microstructure
microhardness
2. Geometrical properties
particle size distribution
external particle shape
internal particle structure (particle porosity)
3. Mechanical properties
flow rate
bulk density
compressibility, green strength and spring-back
All these powder properties are inherited from and specific to the process by which the
powder was produced. Some of them are interrelated with each other. For instance:
microstructure and microhardness are depending on chemical composition;
compressibility decreases with increasing microhardness, increasing particle porosity and
decreasing particle size;
coarser powders and powders of regular particle shape flow better than fine powders and
powders of irregular particle shape;
powders of irregular particle shape have better green strength after compacting than
decides about how high a compacting pressure is needed to achieve a desired compact
density.
Green strength is the bending strength of a green (i.e. compacted but not sintered)
rectangular test bar. Green strength increases with increasing compact density and is
influenced by type and amount of lubricant admixed to the powder. Sufficient green strength is
required to prevent compacts from cracking during ejection from the compacting tool and
prevent them from getting damaged during handling and transport between press and
sintering furnace. The more complex and delicate the shape of a compact, the higher its
green strength should be. If the green strength of compacts is high enough, they may even be
machined prior to sintering (e.g. undercuts, traverse slots and holes).
Spring-back is the elastic expansion of a cylindrical powder compact ( 25 mm) after
ejection from the compacting die. Its value is expressed as the difference between the OD of
the compact and the ID of the (empty) die divided by the ID of the die. Spring-back increases
with increasing compacting pressure and is influenced by type and amount of lubricant
admixed to the powder, and by the elasticity coefficient of the die material in which the powder
is compacted. The spring-back value is important for calculating the exact dimensions of the
compacting tool in relation to the required dimensions of the compact.
Sintering
Sintering is the process by which metal powder compacts (or loose metal powders) are
transformed into coherent solids at temperatures below their melting point. During sintering,
the powder particles are bonded together by diffusion and other atomic transport
mechanisms, and the resulting somewhat porous body acquires a certain mechanical
strength.
The sintering process is governed by the following parameters:
temperature and time,
geometrical structure of the powder particles,
composition of the powder mix,
density of the powder compact,
composition of the protective atmosphere in the sintering furnace.
The driving force behind these sintering phenomena is minimization of the free surface
energy (Gsurface< 0) of the particle agglomerate
In the absence of a liquid phase, five different transport mechanisms are possible:
volume diffusion (migration of vacancies),
grain-boundary diffusion,
surface diffusion,
viscous or plastic flow (caused by surface tension or internal stresses),
evaporation/condensation of atoms on surfaces.
6.2.2 Solid state sintering of heterogeneous material
When a mixture of particles of two different metals is being sintered, alloying takes place at
locations where necks are formed between particles of different metallic identity.
These two processes interact with one another: On the one hand, the growth rate of the neck
now depends not only on the diffusion rates in the two pure metals but also on the different
diffusion rates in the various alloy phases being formed in and on either side of the neck. On
the other hand, the neck width controls the rate of alloy formation.
The outcome of this interaction varies with the chemical identity of the two metals: it may have
an accelerating, a delaying or no effect at all on the growth rate of the neck.
6.2.3 Sintering in presence of a transient liquid phase
Consider a compact made from a mixture of particles of two different metals. If one
component of the mixture melts at sintering temperature, the arising liquid phase is first being
pulled by capillary forces into the narrow gaps between the particles of the solid component,
creating the largest possible contact area between liquid and solid phase.
Then, alloying takes place and, if the initial proportion of the liquid phase is smaller than its
solubility in the solid phase, the liquid phase eventually disappears. The bulk volume of the
compact swells because the melting particles leave behind large pores, while the framework
of solid particles increases in volume corresponding to the amount of dissolved liquid phase.
See schematic illustration at Fig. 6.11.
It can be seen that the liquid copper not only infiltrates the gaps between the iron powder
particles but also penetrates their grain boundaries.
If, in the example above, the pure iron particles are substituted with carbonized iron particles
having a pearlitic microstructure, the liquid copper penetrates the interfaces between ferrite
and cementite lamellae. This leads eventually to a partial disintegration of the pearlitic
particles.
Consequently, the initially rigid framework of solid particles collapses locally, and the bulk
volume of the compact shrinks. The micrograph at Fig. 6.13 shows beginning disintegration of
pearlitic iron particles under the influence of liquid copper.
These examples explain why additions of copper to iron powder mixes result in less shrinkage
or produce growth during sintering of structural parts, and why additions of carbon (graphite)
to iron-copper powder mixes compensate the growth-producing effect of copper
6.2.4 Activated sintering
A special kind of sintering with a transient liquid phase is often referred to as activated
sintering. Here, a base powder is admixed with a small amount of a metal or metal compound
which, although having a melting point above sintering temperature, forms a low-melting
eutectic together with the base metal. See Fig. 6.14.
The added metal or metal compound is called the activator. During sintering, atoms from the
activator diffuse into the particles of the base metal until the latter begin to melt superficially.
This superficial melting enhances the formation of necks between adjacent particles of the
base metal. As the activator continues to diffuse deeper into the particles of the base metal,
the liquid phase (eutectic) disappears again. Activated sintering is utilized e.g. in the
manufacturing of so called heavy metals.
Here, an addition of only a few percent of nickel powder to tungsten powder produces a
transient tungsten-rich eutectic at 1495C which substantially accelerates the sintering
process. The sintering of iron powder can be activated through small additions (e.g. 3 wt.%)
of finely ground ferro-phosphorous (Fe3 P). As can be seen from the binary phase diagram
shown at Fig. 6.15, Fe and Fe3P form a eutectic at 1050C.
During sintering at 1120C, the phosphorous concentration at the surface of the iron powder
particles temporarily exceeds 2,6 wt.%, and the particles melt superficially. But as the
phosphorous diffuses deeper into the iron particles, its concentration at the surface drops
below 2,6 wt.% again, and the liquid phase disappears.
Then, a second benefit of phosphorous becomes effective: Surface regions of the iron
particles with phosphorous concentrations between 2,6 and 0,5 wt.% have changed from
austenite to ferrite. As will be seen in the next paragraph, the coefficient of selfdiffusion
(volume diffusion) for iron is approx. 300 times greater in ferrite than in austenite.
Consequently, at equal temperature, sintering proceeds faster in ferrite than in austenite.
Tensile strength and elongation adopt noticeable values first at sintering temperatures above
650 and 750C respectively. From there-on, they increase almost exponentially until reaching
an intermediate maximum at approx. 900C. Just above 910C, where the crystal structure of
iron changes from ferrite to austenite, the values of tensile strength and elongation suddenly
drop a little and then increase again, but more slowly than below 910C.
All test bars begin to sinter already during the heating-up period, while still in the ferrite state,
and those which are heated up to higher temperatures have already acquired a certain level
of strength before they change from ferrite to austenite.
In order to utilize the advantage of a transient liquid phase during sintering and to achieve
higher strength properties, many commercial iron powder mixes contain copper. Copper
additions to iron powder can produce undesirable dimensional growth during sintering.
Graphite additions to iron-copper powder mixes counteract the dimensional growth caused by
the copper (see 6.2.3). The carbonization of the iron caused by the graphite additions
boosts the mechanical strength of the sintered parts.
6.4 The sintering atmosphere
The main purpose of sintering atmospheres is to protect the powder compacts from oxidation
during sintering and to reduce residual surface oxides in order to improve the metallic contact
between adjacent powder particles. A further purpose of sintering atmospheres is to protect
carbon-containing compacts from decarbonization.
SINTERED IRON-BASED MATERIALS
There are several ways to achieve desired strength properties with iron-based sintered
materials. The most important parameters of influence are:
Density
Sintering conditions
Alloying elements
Heat-treating conditions
Density is of prime importance with respect to the physical properties of sintered structural
parts, because tensile strength and fatigue strength increase in approximate linear proportion,
elongation and impact strength exponentially, with sintered density.
With maximum pressing loads tolerable under mass production conditions (600 - 650
N/mm2), densities up to 7,1 - 7,2 g/cm3 are achievable. This density range can be extended
In principle, alloying elements have the same effect on sintered steels as on conventional
steels. However, not all alloying elements common in conventional steels can be utilized in
sintered steels because some of them, as e.g. Mn, and V, are too easily oxidized in
commercial sintering atmospheres (chapter 6, 6.4). On the other hand, elements
undesirable in conventional steels, like e.g. phosphorous (blue brittleness), can have
beneficial effects on sintered steels (chapter 6, 6.2.4).
Alloy compositions of sintered steels for structural parts have to be carefully selected not only
with respect to desired strength but also with respect to dimensional stability during sintering.
With alloy compositions yielding hardness levels above 150 - 180 HV, it is important that
dimensional changes of the structural parts during sintering are as small as possible and,
even more important, that the scatter of these dimensional changes is kept within the closest
possible limits.
Heat-treating conditions, when applied to sintered steel components, must be especially well
controlled to ensure the highest possible degree of dimensional stability of the component in
the hardening and tempering procedure. Asymmetric cooling during quenching of a sintered
component, especially when of complex shape, may lead to distortions so severe that the part
must either be rejected or subjected to expensive remachining which would wipe out the cost
advantage of P/M technology over conventional production methods.
Dimensional stability of the sintered parts depends on the accuracy with which the above
mentioned parameters can be controlled. Two examples shown at Fig. 9.3 illustrate the
influence of small variations in compact density, sintering conditions and powder composition
on the dimensional changes of powder compacts during sintering. It can be seen from these
examples that intelligently chosen types and amounts of alloying elements can make
dimensional changes of sintered compacts less sensitive to varying processing parameters.