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16 Quick Heat Treat News Chatter Items to Keep You Current

Heat Treat Today offers News Chatter, a feature highlighting representative moves, transactions, and kudos from around the industry.

Personnel & Company Chatter

  • Global aluminum producer Constellium SE recently announced that its casting and rolling operations in Singen, Germany, will offer ASI-certified aluminum rolled solutions, having been granted the chain of custody certification by the Aluminium Stewardship Initiative (ASI).
  • An insulated metal panel manufacturing company was recently acquired by Nucor Corporation. TrueCore LLC, with a facility in Laurens, South Carolina, produces insulated metal panels serving the cold storage market, with future plans for additional commercial and industrial applications.
  • Michael K. Smith has joined Magnetic Specialties, Inc., as the company’s business development manager.
  • Leon J. Topalian and John H. Walker have been elected by the board of directors of Nucor Corporation as a director and non-executive chairman, respectively. Topalian is the president and COO of Nucor and will become the CEO on January 1, 2020. Walker, who has more than 35 years of experience in metal-related manufacturing and fabricating industries, has served as a member of Nucor’s Board of Directors since 2008 and as lead director since 2017.
  • Don P. Newman will join Allegheny Technologies Incorporated as senior vice president, finance and chief financial officer, effective January 6, 2020. Newman succeeds Pat DeCourcy, who will remain as senior vice president and special advisor to the CEO until his retirement on March 31, 2020, after a 31-year career with the company.
  • Mike Otero has been appointed chief operating officer of Braidy Industries, effective January 6, 2020.
  • GFG Alliance, owned by British commodities tycoon Sanjeev Gupta, recently reached an agreement to purchase the Duffel aluminum plant in Belgium from Novelis.
  • James K. Kamsickas has recently been elected president and CEO of Dana Incorporated. The board of directors elected Kamsickas to the additional post of chairman of the board. In addition, Keith E. Wandell, who has served on Dana’s board since July 2008 and as non-executive chairman since September 2016, will continue on the board as lead independent director.
  • The acquisition of Essar Steel India Ltd (ESIL) has reached completion. ArcelorMittal in a joint venture with Nippon Steel Corp. completed the acquisition. The venture, hereby called ArcelorMittal Nippon Steel India Ltd. (AM/NS India) will own and operate ESIL.
  • To support rapid growth within their mechanical testing department, Solar Atmospheres of Western Pennsylvania has recently invested in a new Haas ST-10 CNC lathe.
  • A new special walk-in oven, No. 942, from Grieve Corporation, is currently being used for curing epoxy at the customer’s facility.
  • An Ecomelt-PS150 melting furnace and two tiltable holding and casting furnaces have been supplied to Otto Fuchs KG and installed in the company’s Meinerzhagen casthouse by Hertwich Engineering, a company of SMS group.
  • A new rotary furnace for recycling aluminum scrap was recently started at the Villadangos, Spain, facility of Latem Aluminium. The new 30-ton furnace was designed by GHI Smart Furnaces.
  • Process Cooling Systems Inc was recently chosen along with 15 other companies to receive the Sixteenth Annual Team Massachusetts Economic Impact Award. MassEcon, the state’s private sector partner in promoting business growth in Massachusetts, recognized the sixteen companies for their outstanding contributions to the Massachusetts economy. The companies were selected on the basis of job growth, facility expansion, investment, and community involvement since January 1, 2018. The winners were honored at a luncheon on November 26, 2019.

    Paulo announces that three of its facilities have been awarded Gulfstream approval
  • Paulo announces that three of its facilities have been awarded Gulfstream approval following on-site audits in St. Louis, Cleveland, and Kansas City. The scope of the approval encompasses several Gulfstream specifications for various materials and processes. Paulo is approved for GAMPS 5101, 5102, 5103, 5104, 5105. Paulo’s Cleveland facility was also approved for hot isostatic pressing and furnace brazing.
  • LAI International marks its 40-year anniversary as a global leader in advanced manufacturing technologies for the aerospace, defense, medical, and industrial sectors. Founded in 1979 as a regional contract manufacturer specializing in laser welding and laser heat-treating processes, the company expanded its capabilities with proprietary waterjet machining, laser drilling, and additive manufacturing capabilities. Over the years, LAI has manufactured highly engineered components for some of the world’s leading innovators, including Lockheed Martin, Northrup Grumman, and GE.

Heat Treat Today is pleased to join in the announcements of growth and achievement throughout the industry by highlighting them here on our News Chatter page. Please send any information you feel may be of interest to manufacturers with in-house heat treat departments especially in the aerospace, automotive, medical, and energy sectors to editor@heattreattoday.com

16 Quick Heat Treat News Chatter Items to Keep You Current Read More »

Titanium-Copper Alloy May Improve 3D Process for Medical, Aerospace Applications

 

Source: Today’s Medical Developments

 

A new category of high-performance titanium-copper alloys for 3D printing is being considered for medical device, aerospace, and defense applications, and heat-treating may improve the process further.

In a collaborative project, leading researchers from RMIT University, CSIRO, the University of Queensland, and The Ohio State University studied the problem of titanium alloys being prone to cracking or distortion due to cooling and bonding together in column-shaped crystals during the 3D printing process. But a titanium-copper alloy developed by the research team seems to have solved this dilemma.

“Of particular note was its fully equiaxed grain structure,” said Professor Mark Easton from RMIT University’s School of Engineering in Today’s Medical Developments. “This means the crystal grains had grown equally in all directions to form a strong bond, instead of in columns, which can lead to weak points liable to cracking. Alloys with this microstructure can withstand much higher forces and will be much less likely to have defects, such as cracking or distortion, during manufacture.”

More from this Best of the Web:

CSIRO Senior Principal Research Scientist, Dr. Mark Gibson, says their findings also suggest similar metal systems could be treated in the same way to improve their properties.

“Titanium-copper alloys are one option, particularly if the use of other additional alloying elements or heat treatments can be employed to improve the properties further,” Gibson says. “But there are also a number of other alloying elements that are likely to have similar effects. These could all have applications in the aerospace and biomedical industries.”

 

Read more: “Adding Copper Strengthens 3D-Printed Titanium”

Main photo credit / caption: RMIT University / 3D-printed titanium-copper bars with titanium powder and copper powder.

Titanium-Copper Alloy May Improve 3D Process for Medical, Aerospace Applications Read More »

Steel Dynamics Expands Rolling Mill, Includes 3-MW Induction Furnace

A steel producer based in Fort Wayne, Indiana, recently announced the expansion of their rolling mill, which will include a 3-MW induction furnace to heat the stock coming from the existing mill.

Steel Dynamics USA announced the expansion at their Columbia City, Indiana, location. Among other equipment being added are a 70-m conveyor connecting the existing medium section mill to the new spooler line, six housingless SHS 180 roller stands, complete with quick stand-changing table, a 6-pass Delta-type finishing block driven by a low-voltage- 2.5-MW motor and finishing services.

SDI and Danieli teams studied a temporary removable solution, steel support structure to support the existing furnace-exit roller table, allowing the execution of the Billet Welder concrete foundation with only minor impact to the MSM (Medium Section Mill) production schedule.

Steel Dynamics Expands Rolling Mill, Includes 3-MW Induction Furnace Read More »

Heat Treat Tips: Maximizing Carbon Probe Life

One of the great benefits of a community of heat treaters is the opportunity to challenge old habits and look at new ways of doing things. Heat Treat Today’s 101 Heat Treat Tips is another opportunity to learn the tips, tricks, and hacks shared by some of the industry’s foremost experts.

For Heat Treat Today’s latest round of 101 Heat Treat Tipsclick here for the digital edition of the 2019 Heat Treat Today fall issue (also featuring the popular 40 Under 40).

Today’s Technical Tuesday features a tip from Jim Oakes of Super Systems, Inc,  covering Probes. Jim's tip suggests some fundamental procedures that should be performed properly to maximize carbon/oxygen probe life.

If you have a heat treat-related tip that would benefit your industry colleagues, you can submit your tip(s) to doug@heattreattoday.com or editor@heattreattoday.com.

Jim Oakes, Super Systems, Inc

Are you not getting the life that you would expect from your carbon/oxygen probe? There are some fundamental procedures that should be performed properly to maximize probe life.

1. Clean reference air. The probe needs a fresh source of air provided in the reference air fitting to ensure that the partial pressure of air is consistent. This will provide accuracy in the carbon calculation, and assuming the air does not contain any contaminates, it will lead to longer life under normal use.

2. Proper burnoff procedures. Make sure that you follow the manufacturer's recommendation on probe burnoff. Frequency and duration are dependent on the application (temperature, atmosphere, cycle time, and furnace), but regardless of these, ensuring a probe burnoff's effectiveness can be measured by watching what happens during the burnoff.

a. Probe mV. The probe mV is the best indication that a burnoff is effectively performed. Soot deposition occurs in two critical locations: the annular space between the sheath and the measuring surface, and at the measuring junction between the zirconia and the contact point with the sheath, which is the measuring electrode. The burnoff is performed to remedy this. Burnoff air is forced down the probe on the inside of the sheath but the outside of the probe substrate to force any buildup of soot/carbon on the probe where it can cause electrical connection issues and attack the probe sheath or create a carbon ring internal to the probe. By watching the mV during the burnoff, you should see them drop to 200mV or below during the burnoff process. This information will provide evidence that the burnoff is effective. If you are not getting the mV below that value, then there is not enough air flowing through the airway to force out any soot. Reasons could be:

i. The burnoff pump is not providing enough flow (Super Systems Inc.-SSI recommends 10 scfh or greater.).

ii. The pressure/agitation of the furnace is greater than what the burnoff pump can provide. If the burnoff pump is sized properly and properly working, the timing of the burnoff may need to occur when there is a relief in pressure (inner door opens) or temporarily turning the fan off during the burnoff.

iii. The probe has already been sooted up and should be evaluated for a carbon ring and blockage in that airway.

b. Assuming you have a thermocouple in the tip of the probe, you can monitor the temperature. If the tip superheats, it can damage the tip and in some cases oxidize the tip of the probe. The probe tip should not exceed the furnace temperature by more than 100 degrees.

3. Frequency is dependent upon the environment the probe is exposed to. At the least, SSI recommends performing a burnoff once a day but will suggest increasing that based on the atmosphere setpoint, use of stop-off paint, and length of heat treat cycles. Avoid a frequency of fewer than 6 hours if possible. The duration of the burnout should not exceed 90 seconds. A good way to measure the effectiveness is based on the mV reading dropping below 200.

Heat Treat Tips: Maximizing Carbon Probe Life Read More »

Nippon Light Metal North America Inc. & ITOCHU Metals Corporation Launch Joint Venture in Georgia

 

Source: Light Metal Age

 

Nippon Light Metal North America Inc. and ITOCHU Metals Corporation have launched a joint venture to construct an aluminum forging plant in Adairsville, Georgia, for the manufacturing of aluminum automotive parts.

The two Japanese metals companies began construction on this new facility in an effort to meet the demand for lighter-weight vehicles.

An excerpt:

“As tighter environment[al] regulations are implemented around the world and the need for lighter-weight vehicles grows, it is expected that demand for aluminum products will also expand further in North America. In establishing a new facility in North America, Nippon Light Metal is aiming to strengthen its global supply structure by drawing on ITOCHU Metals’ business experience and network.”

 

Read more: “Nippon Light Metal Georgia to Build Automotive Aluminum Forging Plant”

 

Nippon Light Metal North America Inc. & ITOCHU Metals Corporation Launch Joint Venture in Georgia Read More »

Cleveland-Cliffs Acquires AK Steel, Integrating Steel & Iron Ore Production

AK Steel, a leading producer of flat-rolled carbon, stainless, and electrical steel products was recently acquired by Cleveland-Cliffs Inc., an iron ore company, with a definitive merger agreement to position the new company to create a vertically integrated producer of value-added iron ore and steel products.

Lourenco Goncalves, chairman of the board, president, and CEO of Cleveland-Cliffs

Under the terms of the merger, Cleveland-Cliffs will acquire all of AK Steel’s common stock, and expand their capabilities across the entire manufacturing process, from mining to pelletizing to the development and production of finished high-value steel products, including next-generation advanced high strength steels for automotive and other industries.

“By combining the best-in-class quality of AK Steel’s assets and its enviable product mix with Cliffs’ debt profile and proven management team, we are creating a premier North American company, self-sufficient in iron ore pellets and geared toward high value-added steel products,” said Lourenco Goncalves, chairman of the board, president, and CEO of Cleveland-Cliffs, who will lead the expanded organization. He added that the new company “is well-positioned to serve both the blast furnace and electric arc furnace segments.”

Roger K. Newport, CEO of AK Steel

“The combination of Cliffs’ iron ore pellet capabilities and our innovative, high-quality steel product development and production is strategically compelling,” said Roger K. Newport, CEO of AK Steel. “Together, we expect to be able to take advantage of growth opportunities faster and more fully than either company could on its own. With AK Steel’s 120-year heritage, which began in Ohio, and expertise in steelmaking, AK Steel and Cliffs make an excellent combination, which we expect will facilitate a smooth integration process.”

Cleveland-Cliffs Acquires AK Steel, Integrating Steel & Iron Ore Production Read More »

Bombardier Announces Plans to Relocate Global Aircraft Final Assembly

Canadian business jet manufacturer Bombardier recently announced that it will relocate its global aircraft final assembly plant to Mississauga, Ontario.

Bombardier signed a long-term lease agreement with the Greater Toronto Airports Authority (GTAA) to build its new state-of-the-art Global Manufacturing Centre located at Toronto Pearson International Airport. Preliminary site work is underway, and first production activities are set to begin in 2023, opening the way for final assembly operations for all global business jets, including the industry flagship Global 7500 business jet.

Alain Bellemare, president and CEO, Bombardier Inc

A rendering of Bombardier’s Global Manufacturing Centre at Toronto International Pearson

The one-million-square-foot facility will incorporate Bombardier’s advanced manufacturing technology, including a state-of-the-art automated positioning system that uses laser-guided measuring to ensure major aircraft structures, such as the wing and fuselage, are joined consistently and perfectly each time.

“Today, I’m very excited to announce the relocation of our Global aircraft family production activities to a new, cutting-edge manufacturing facility at Toronto Pearson,” said Alain Bellemare, president and CEO, Bombardier Inc. “This is a strategic move for Bombardier and a strong commitment to Ontario’s aerospace industry. It will allow us to offer world-class career opportunities and continue fueling the economic development of the region for years to come.”

Bombardier Announces Plans to Relocate Global Aircraft Final Assembly Read More »

Heat Treat Provider Expands HIP Capabilities to Serve Quality-Critical Industries

A heat treating and metal processing services provider in the Pacific Northwest recently increased its hot isostatic pressing (HIP) capabilities with the purchase of new equipment to enable the company to process a broad range of materials and lot sizes for quality-critical industries, such as energy, aerospace, and medical.

Doug Puerta, CEO, Stack Metallurgical Group

Stack Metallurgical Group has doubled its HIP processing with the addition of a model QIH 122 M URC® from Quintus Technologies following the recent installation of a high-capacity Mega-HIP, the QIH286 M URC®; both combine HIP and heat treatment in a single process and are located at Stack’s recently completed facility in Albany, Oregon.

“We’ve been extremely happy with the market response as we have expanded our service offerings to include HIP,” said Doug Puerta, CEO, Stack Metallurgical Group. “The massive size of our first unit enables us to process larger castings and/or powder metal components. The new unit now allows us to process all ranges of materials and lot sizes and is ideal for moderately sized components. The capabilities and capacity offered by these two units further strengthen the value proposition that Stack facilities provide their clients.”

Jan Söderström, CEO of Quintus Technologies

“We see opportunities not only in traditional markets such as castings but also in emerging markets, with additive manufacturing being the most notable,” added Puerta.

“Stack’s decision to invest in a second Quintus HIP is a tribute to our leadership position in the industry,” said Jan Söderström, CEO of Quintus Technologies. “As the need for hot isostatic pressing steadily increases, we are very pleased with this next step in our relationship.”

 

Heat Treat Provider Expands HIP Capabilities to Serve Quality-Critical Industries Read More »

GE Aviation Extends, Expands Agreement with Specialty Materials Manufacturer

A global manufacturer of technically advanced specialty materials and complex components recently announced that it has reached an agreement on multiple new long-term contracts with an aircraft engine supplier to supply iso-thermal and hot-die forgings used in the manufacture of commercial jet engines.

Robert S. Wetherbee, ATI’s president and CEO

GE Aviation, headquartered in Evendale, Ohio, has contracted with Allegheny Technologies Incorporated (ATI) for the development and production of materials and components for hotter-burning, more fuel-efficient jet engines.

“We are pleased to extend and expand our six-decade partnership with GE Aviation,” said Robert S. Wetherbee, ATI’s president and CEO. “These long-term agreements demonstrate the trust that GE Aviation places in ATI to deliver the highest quality materials and components to their production lines on-time.”

Michael J. Wagner, GE Aviation’s global sourcing general manager

“This is a great example of how we are developing key partnerships, like ATI, for the purpose of growing capability and capacity in the forging industry to ensure we can support our customers,” said Michael J. Wagner, GE Aviation’s global sourcing general manager.

GE Aviation Extends, Expands Agreement with Specialty Materials Manufacturer Read More »

Dr. Valery Rudnev on Equipment Selection for Induction Hardening: Single-Shot Hardening, Part 3

This article continues the ongoing discussion on Equipment Selection for Induction Hardening by Dr. Valery Rudnev, FASM, IFHTSE Fellow. Six previous installments in Dr. Rudnev’s series on equipment selection addressed selected aspects of scan hardening and continuous/progressive hardening systems. This post is the third in a discussion on equipment selection for one of four popular induction hardening techniques focusing on single-shot hardening systems.

Previous articles in the series on equipment selection for single-shot hardening are here (part 1) and here (part 2). To see the earlier articles in the Induction Hardening series at Heat Treat Today as well as other news about Dr. Rudnev, click here


Single-Shot Inductors for Non-Cylinder Parts

Single-shot inductors can be successfully used for hardening not only components of classical cylinder geometries but other geometries as well. This includes workpieces of general conical shapes, such as elliptic, parabolic, hyperbolic geometries—and the list can grow. As an example, Figure 1 shows induction surface-hardened ball joints (ball studs) and the single-shot inductors used to harden them. Ball studs are used in automotive, off-road, and agricultural machinery and can be different in shape and size (Compare images on the left in Figure 1 with images on the right.), requiring noticeably different hardness patterns.

Figure 1. Surface-hardened ball joints (ball studs) and single-shot inductors used for its hardening. (Courtesy of Inductoheat Inc., an Inductotherm Group company.)

In any attempt to scan harden workpieces with appreciable diameter changes, the scan coil must have a sufficient gap to clear the largest diameter. When scanning the section(s) of the workpiece with smaller diameters, an inductor-to-shaft air gap might be very large, resulting in low electrical efficiency and potentially exhibiting difficulties in load matching as well as in controlling the austenitizing pattern along the length of the part producing "cold" and "hot" spots. Additional difficulties may appear in controlling the hardness pattern in regions (e.g., near geometrical irregularities) where good control is most needed.

Thus, the substantially different workpiece-to-inductor electromagnetic coupling variations might not permit using classical multiturn solenoid coils or scan inductors. In contrast, single-shot inductors allow not only better electromagnetic coupling along the entire length of heat treated components (Figure 2) but also better address the geometrical irregularities of heat treated workpieces, producing the required hardness patterns at minimum process times with superior metallurgical quality.

Figure 2.  Single-shot inductors allow better electromagnetic coupling along the length of heat treated components properly addressing the geometrical complexity of the workpiece. (Courtesy of Inductoheat Inc., an Inductotherm Group company.)

As stated in Part 1 of this series, in contrast to scan hardening, a single-shot inductor can be contoured along the length of the part properly addressing the geometrical complexity of the workpiece. Furthermore, the use of flux concentrators helps drive the current into the desired areas and allows producing a well-defined hardness profile with minimum distortion. The trade-off here is that more finesse is required in the design stage to produce the properly profiled single-shot inductor at the lowest possible cost.¹ Errors are costly since these inductors are each custom made for a given part or application and modifications can be quite costly. Thus, computer modeling is a helpful assistant as an attempt to keep the development cost down and shorten the "learning curve".

Proper hardening of such components as output shafts, flanged shafts, planet carriers, yoke shafts, sun shafts, intermediate shafts, driveshafts, turbine shafts, and some others may require extensive copper profiling, making a single-shot hardening inductor a complex electromagnetic device.

Certain geometrical features such as flanges, diameter changes, bearing shoulders, grooves, undercuts, splines, etc., may distort the mag­netic field generated by an inductor, which, in turn, can cause tem­perature deviations, making it challenging to achieve certain hardness patterns.

For components containing fillets, it is often necessary to increase the heat intensity in the fillet region owing to the geometrical specifics. Also, the larger mass of metal in the proximity of the heated fillet and behind the region to be hardened produces a substantial thermal “cold sink” effect.¹ This draws heat from the fillet due to thermal conduction, which must be compensated for by generating additional heating energy in the fillet area.

Needed energy surplus can be achieved by narrowing the current-carrying face of the crossover segment of the single-shot inductor (Figure 3). Here is a simplified illustration of an impact of a copper profiling of the inductor’s heating face: if the current-carrying portion of the inductor heating face is reduced by 50 percent, there is a corresponding increase in current density. This will be accompanied by an increase of the eddy current density induced within the respective region. According to the Joule effect, doubling the induced eddy current density increases the induced power density roughly by a factor of four. Also, attaching a magnetic flux concentrator to certain areas of the hardening inductor further enhances the localized heat intensity.

Figure 3.  Longitudinal leg sections of single-shot indicators and their crossover segments can be profiled by relieving selected regions of the copper to accommodate workpiece geometrical features. Attaching a magnetic flux concentrator to certain areas of the inductor further enhances localized heat intensity. (From V. Rudnev, A. Goodwin, S. Fillip, W. West, J. Schwab, S. St. Pierre, Keys to long-lasting hardening inductors: Experience, materials, and precision, Adv. Mater. Processes, October 2015, pp. 48–52.)

When using a single-shot inductor, it is particularly important that the workpiece is properly located in the heating position because seemingly minor dislocations may noticeably affect the heat treat pattern and metallurgical quality of hardened parts.

Traditionally designed single-shot inductors may exhibit high process sensitivity that is associated with the electromagnetic proximity effect.¹ A change in positioning of the workpiece inside the single-shot inductor attributed to excessive bearing wear of the centers, improper machining of the centers and fixtures, incorrect part loading, and other factors may produce a correspondent appreciable variation in the hardness pattern (particularly within the fillet region, undercut areas, and the part’s end zone). A reduced hardness case depth and the formation of unwanted microstructural products associated with incomplete phase transformation may be the result of that. Magnitude and distribution of transient and residual stresses might also be altered. Thus, attention should be paid to part’s reliable positioning during heating and quenching cycles.

As can be concluded, there are good reasons for using single-shot hardening, scan hardening, or continuous/progressing hardening approaches in induction hardening applications. The decision must be well thought out based on many factors such as geometry specifics, product quality, production rate, design proficiency, limitations of available equipment, reliability requirements, cost considerations, and some other factors.

The next installment of this series, Dr. Valery Rudnev on .  . . , will continue the discussion on design features of induction single-shot hardening systems.


References

  1. V.Rudnev, D.Loveless, R.Cook, Handbook of Induction Heating, 2nd Edition, CRC Press, 2017.
  2. V.Rudnev, "Dr. Valery Rudnev on . . . Equipment Selection for Induction Hardening: Single-Shot Hardening, Part 1", Heat Treat Today, July 9, 2019.
  3. V.Rudnev, A.Goodwin, S.Fillip, W.West, J.Schwab, S.St.Pierre, "Keys to long-lasting hardening inductors: Experience, materials, and precision", Adv. Mater. Processes, October 2015, pp. 48–52.

Dr. Valery Rudnev on Equipment Selection for Induction Hardening: Single-Shot Hardening, Part 3 Read More »