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Détail de l'auteur
Auteur Michael A. Klecka
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur
Affiner la rechercheDetermination of subsurface hardness gradients in plastically graded materials via surface indentation / Michael A. Klecka in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of tribology, Vol. 133 N° 3 (Juillet 2011)
[article]
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of tribology > Vol. 133 N° 3 (Juillet 2011) . - 05 p.
Titre : Determination of subsurface hardness gradients in plastically graded materials via surface indentation Type de document : texte imprimé Auteurs : Michael A. Klecka, Auteur ; Ghatu Subhash, Auteur ; Nagaraj K. Arakere, Auteur Année de publication : 2012 Article en page(s) : 05 p. Note générale : Tribology Langues : Anglais (eng) Mots-clés : Ductility Fatigue Functionally graded materials Hardness Indentation Machine bearings Materials testing Plasticity Steel Surface hardening Wear resistance Index. décimale : 621.5 Energie pneumatique. Machinerie et outils. Réfrigération Résumé : Graded materials with high surface hardness and ductile cores are popularly used in high performance bearing applications to resist surface wear and fatigue damage. The gradient in hardness with depth is commonly determined using micro-indentation on the cross section of the material which contains the gradation in microstructure or composition. In the current study, a novel method is proposed to predict the hardness gradient profile using solely surface indentations at a range of loads. The method does not require the graded material to be sectioned, and has practical utility in the surface treatment industry. Two case hardened steels, M-50 NiL and Pyrowear® 675, and a through-hardened M50 steel, are used as model materials to illustrate the concepts. For a material with a decreasing gradient in hardness, higher indent loads result in a lower measured hardness due to the influence of the softer subsurface layers. A power-law model is presented which relates the measured surface indentation hardness under increasing load to the subsurface gradient in hardness. It is shown that the response of the material is not influenced greatly by the absolute surface hardness value, but instead sensitive to the sharpness of the gradient in subsurface hardness beneath the indented region. The proposed approach is not specific to case hardened steels and can be used to determine the subsurface hardness gradient for any plastically graded material (PGM). DEWEY : 621.5 ISSN : 0742-4787 En ligne : http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JOTRE900013 [...] [article] Determination of subsurface hardness gradients in plastically graded materials via surface indentation [texte imprimé] / Michael A. Klecka, Auteur ; Ghatu Subhash, Auteur ; Nagaraj K. Arakere, Auteur . - 2012 . - 05 p.
Tribology
Langues : Anglais (eng)
in Transactions of the ASME . Journal of tribology > Vol. 133 N° 3 (Juillet 2011) . - 05 p.
Mots-clés : Ductility Fatigue Functionally graded materials Hardness Indentation Machine bearings Materials testing Plasticity Steel Surface hardening Wear resistance Index. décimale : 621.5 Energie pneumatique. Machinerie et outils. Réfrigération Résumé : Graded materials with high surface hardness and ductile cores are popularly used in high performance bearing applications to resist surface wear and fatigue damage. The gradient in hardness with depth is commonly determined using micro-indentation on the cross section of the material which contains the gradation in microstructure or composition. In the current study, a novel method is proposed to predict the hardness gradient profile using solely surface indentations at a range of loads. The method does not require the graded material to be sectioned, and has practical utility in the surface treatment industry. Two case hardened steels, M-50 NiL and Pyrowear® 675, and a through-hardened M50 steel, are used as model materials to illustrate the concepts. For a material with a decreasing gradient in hardness, higher indent loads result in a lower measured hardness due to the influence of the softer subsurface layers. A power-law model is presented which relates the measured surface indentation hardness under increasing load to the subsurface gradient in hardness. It is shown that the response of the material is not influenced greatly by the absolute surface hardness value, but instead sensitive to the sharpness of the gradient in subsurface hardness beneath the indented region. The proposed approach is not specific to case hardened steels and can be used to determine the subsurface hardness gradient for any plastically graded material (PGM). DEWEY : 621.5 ISSN : 0742-4787 En ligne : http://scitation.aip.org/getabs/servlet/GetabsServlet?prog=normal&id=JOTRE900013 [...]