Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum

The paper presents a study of the effect of adding Mo and MoS2 on the microstructure and properties of a powder coating based on austenitic steels. The coatings have been studied using X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), a Vickers hardness tester, and abr...

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Main Authors: F. I. Panteleenko, V. A. Okovity, O. G. Devoino, V. V. Okovity, A. S. Volodko, V. M. Astashinsky
Format: Article
Language:Russian
Published: Belarusian National Technical University 2021-04-01
Series:Nauka i Tehnika
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sat.bntu.by/jour/article/view/2422
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spelling doaj-6e4acb14b8254dba8d49bb21e22c44ab2021-07-29T08:29:37ZrusBelarusian National Technical UniversityNauka i Tehnika2227-10312414-03922021-04-012029510010.21122/2227-1031-2021-20-2-95-1002109Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding MolybdenumF. I. Panteleenko0V. A. Okovity1O. G. Devoino2V. V. Okovity3A. S. Volodko4V. M. Astashinsky5Belarusian National Technical UniversityBelarusian National Technical UniversityBelarusian National Technical UniversityBelarusian National Technical UniversityBelarusian National Technical UniversityA. V. Luikov Heat and Mass Transfer Institute of NAS of BelarusThe paper presents a study of the effect of adding Mo and MoS2 on the microstructure and properties of a powder coating based on austenitic steels. The coatings have been studied using X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), a Vickers hardness tester, and abrasion wear resistance has been determined by the Pin on disk method. The results show that a coating that does not contain Mo and MoS2 consists of the phases g(Fe), M7(C, B)3 and (Fe, Cr)2B. The addition of Mo and MoS2 leads to the formation of phases M23(C, B)6, Mo2(B, C) and Fe3Mo3(C, B), where M = Fe, Cr, Mo. The main goal of these studies was to study characteristics of Mo and MoS2 distribution and the effect of their addition on the microstructure, hardness, and abrasion wear resistance of an alloy coating based on austenitic steels. Composite materials based on austenitic steels obtained by diffusion alloying (Aus0Mo), which has a nearly spherical shape with a diameter of 50–100 μm, have been used for deposition. 3–7 wt. % of Mo powder and 1.0–1.5 wt. % of MoS2 powder with a diameter  less than 50 μm have been added in the powder of the composite material based on austenitic steels (Aus3Mo, Aus5Mo, Aus7Mo). Surfacing methods, including gas arc welding with a tungsten electrode, arc welding in shielding gas, plasma surfacing (PTA) and laser surfacing are widely used in industry to increase wear resistance of surfaces. The most important differences between these methods are deposition rate, applicability of materials, substrate dilution, microstructure and hardness stability after exposure to high temperatures, as well as manufacturing cost. Among the methods described above, plasma spraying followed by fusion is a good alternative to other surfacing processes. The coating should not be overheated until it is completely  melted, since in this case the primary crystals of chromium carbides and borides pass into a liquid solution and upon subsequent crystallization, form a coarser structure, worsening the quality of the coating. This is precisely what does not occur during plasma spraying followed by reflow; in addition, the method is cheap, coatings are of high quality, competitive wear resistance and high stability of properties at high temperature.https://sat.bntu.by/jour/article/view/2422plasma sprayingreflowmaterialspowdersaustenitic steelsmolybdenummorphologycoating structurephase characteristicsabrasive wear resistance
collection DOAJ
language Russian
format Article
sources DOAJ
author F. I. Panteleenko
V. A. Okovity
O. G. Devoino
V. V. Okovity
A. S. Volodko
V. M. Astashinsky
spellingShingle F. I. Panteleenko
V. A. Okovity
O. G. Devoino
V. V. Okovity
A. S. Volodko
V. M. Astashinsky
Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum
Nauka i Tehnika
plasma spraying
reflow
materials
powders
austenitic steels
molybdenum
morphology
coating structure
phase characteristics
abrasive wear resistance
author_facet F. I. Panteleenko
V. A. Okovity
O. G. Devoino
V. V. Okovity
A. S. Volodko
V. M. Astashinsky
author_sort F. I. Panteleenko
title Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum
title_short Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum
title_full Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum
title_fullStr Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum
title_full_unstemmed Forming Coatings from Self-Fluxing Powder Based on Steels of Austenite Class Adding Molybdenum
title_sort forming coatings from self-fluxing powder based on steels of austenite class adding molybdenum
publisher Belarusian National Technical University
series Nauka i Tehnika
issn 2227-1031
2414-0392
publishDate 2021-04-01
description The paper presents a study of the effect of adding Mo and MoS2 on the microstructure and properties of a powder coating based on austenitic steels. The coatings have been studied using X-ray diffraction (XRD), optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy (SEM), a Vickers hardness tester, and abrasion wear resistance has been determined by the Pin on disk method. The results show that a coating that does not contain Mo and MoS2 consists of the phases g(Fe), M7(C, B)3 and (Fe, Cr)2B. The addition of Mo and MoS2 leads to the formation of phases M23(C, B)6, Mo2(B, C) and Fe3Mo3(C, B), where M = Fe, Cr, Mo. The main goal of these studies was to study characteristics of Mo and MoS2 distribution and the effect of their addition on the microstructure, hardness, and abrasion wear resistance of an alloy coating based on austenitic steels. Composite materials based on austenitic steels obtained by diffusion alloying (Aus0Mo), which has a nearly spherical shape with a diameter of 50–100 μm, have been used for deposition. 3–7 wt. % of Mo powder and 1.0–1.5 wt. % of MoS2 powder with a diameter  less than 50 μm have been added in the powder of the composite material based on austenitic steels (Aus3Mo, Aus5Mo, Aus7Mo). Surfacing methods, including gas arc welding with a tungsten electrode, arc welding in shielding gas, plasma surfacing (PTA) and laser surfacing are widely used in industry to increase wear resistance of surfaces. The most important differences between these methods are deposition rate, applicability of materials, substrate dilution, microstructure and hardness stability after exposure to high temperatures, as well as manufacturing cost. Among the methods described above, plasma spraying followed by fusion is a good alternative to other surfacing processes. The coating should not be overheated until it is completely  melted, since in this case the primary crystals of chromium carbides and borides pass into a liquid solution and upon subsequent crystallization, form a coarser structure, worsening the quality of the coating. This is precisely what does not occur during plasma spraying followed by reflow; in addition, the method is cheap, coatings are of high quality, competitive wear resistance and high stability of properties at high temperature.
topic plasma spraying
reflow
materials
powders
austenitic steels
molybdenum
morphology
coating structure
phase characteristics
abrasive wear resistance
url https://sat.bntu.by/jour/article/view/2422
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