Metals (Jun 2021)

Oxidation Behavior of Maraging 300 Alloy Exposed to Nitrogen/Water Vapor Atmosphere at 500 °C

  • Mauro Andres Cerra Florez,
  • Gemma Fargas Ribas,
  • Jorge Luiz Cardoso,
  • Antonio Manuel Mateo García,
  • Joan Josep Roa Rovira,
  • Moises Bastos-Neto,
  • Hamilton Ferreira Gomes de Abreu,
  • Marcelo José Gomes da Silva

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/met11071021
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 7
p. 1021

Abstract

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Aging heat treatments in maraging steels are fundamental to achieve the excellent mechanical properties required in several industries, i.e., nuclear, automotive, etc. In this research, samples of maraging 300 alloy were aged using a novel procedure that combines different steps with two atmospheres (nitrogen and water vapor) for several hours. The oxidized surface layer was chemical, microstructural and micromechanically characterized. Due to the thermodynamic and kinetic conditions, these gases reacted and change the surface chemistry of this steel producing a thin iron-based oxide layer of a homogeneous thickness of around 500 nm. Within the aforementioned information, porosity and other microstructural defects showed a non-homogeneous oxide, mainly constituted by magnetite, nickel ferrite, cobalt ferrite, and a small amount of hematite in the more external parts of the oxide layer. In this sense, from a chemical point of view, the heat treatment under specific atmosphere allows to induce a thin magnetic layer in a mixture of iron, nickel, and cobalt spinel ferrites. On the other hand, the oxide layer presents an adhesive force 99 mN value that shows the capability for being used for tribological applications under sliding contact tests.

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