Full Density Powder Metallurgical Cold Work Tool Steel through Nitrogen Sintering and Capsule-Free Hot Isostatic Pressing

Full Density Powder Metallurgical Cold Work Tool Steel through Nitrogen Sintering and Capsule-Free Hot Isostatic Pressing

Anok Babu Nagaram, Giulio Maistro, Erik Adolfsson, Yu Cao, Eduard Hryha and Lars Nyborg

Abstract

Vanadis 4E (V4E) is a powder metallurgical cold work tool steel predominantly used in application with demand for wear resistance, high hardness, and toughness. It is of interest to have a processing route that enables full density starting from clean gas-atomized powder allowing component shaping capabilities. This study presents a process involving freeze granulation of powder to facilitate compaction by means of cold isostatic pressing, followed by sintering to allow for capsule-free hot isostatic pressing (HIP) and subsequent heat treatments of fully densified specimens. Citation: Nagaram, A.B.; Maistro, G.; Adolfsson, E.; Cao, Y.; Hryha, E.; Nyborg, L. Full Density Powder Metallurgical Cold Work Tool Steel through Nitrogen Sintering and Capsule-Free Hot Isostatic Pressing. Metals 2024, 14, 914. https://doi.org/ 10.3390/met14080914 Academic Editor: Andreas Chrysanthou Received: 17 June 2024 Revised: 31 July 2024 Accepted: 2 August 2024 Published: 12 August 2024 Copyright: © 2024 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https:// creativecommons.org/licenses/by/ 4.0/). The sintering stage has been studied in particular, and it is shown how sintering in pure nitrogen at 1150 ◦C results in predominantly closed porosity, while sintering at 1200 ◦C gives near full density. Microstructural investigation shows that vanadium-rich carbonitride (MX) is formed as a result of the nitrogen uptake during sintering, with coarser appearance for the higher temperature. Nearly complete densification, approximately 7.80 ± 0.01 g/cm3, was achieved after sintering at 1200 ◦C, and after sintering at 1150 ◦C, followed by capsule-free HIP, hardening, and tempering. Irrespective of processing once the MX is formed, the nitrogen is locked into this phase and the austenite is stabilised, which means any tempering tends to result in a mixture of austenite and tempered martensite, the former being predominate during the sequential tempering, whereas martensite formation during cooling from austenitization temperatures becomes limited.

Keywords:

cold work tool steel; freeze granulation; sintering; capsule-free hot isostatic pressing; full densification