hiping heat treat

American Isostatic Presses, Inc., Increases Heat Treating Footprint in Ohio

An isostatic press manufacturer based in Columbus, Ohio, has expanded its operations facility to increase its heat treating capacity and technological capabilities.

Amercian Isostatic Presses, Inc., which manufactures temperature and pressure products, including hot isostatic pressing (HIP), cold isostatic pressing (CIP), warm isostatic pressing (WIP), SinterHIPs, vacuum furnaces, and other equipment and accessories, serves the aerospace, automotive, energy, defense, and medical sectors.


Hot isostatic pressing (HIPing) is most commonly used in the medical and aerospace industries. The HIPing process is a high pressure, high temperature technique that can be used for both composite materials and powder metals. HIPing results in the decreased porosity in parts and a densification in powder metals.

HIPing is in an autoclave style furnace, where parts are exposed to high temperatures and high gas pressure and later cooled. Parts made of tool steel, duplex, martensitic, and austenitic stainless steels, nickel-based alloys, cobalt-based alloys, titanium and even some carbon steels are frequently HIPed. The combination of temperature and pressure reduces the part’s porosity while maintaining its original shape. Decreased porosity gives the finished component part increased mechanical properties.

Read more about HIPing at Heat Treat Today’s Resources page.

The press release is available in its original form here.



American Isostatic Presses, Inc., Increases Heat Treating Footprint in Ohio Read More »

HIP: Technology that Takes Components into Space 

Hot isostatic press (HIP) processing is a manufacturing technology used to densify metal and ceramic parts to improve a material’s mechanical properties. It is based on applying high levels of pressure (up to 2,000 bar/200Mpa) and temperature (up to 3632°F (2000°C)) through an inert atmosphere in order to densify parts and components, mostly of metallic and ceramic material, and to give them improved mechanical properties.  

HIP technology has become the decisive tool for aerospace parts and components to certify materials and parts with the strictest quality and safety controls. These developments require highly advanced, complex, and processed materials capable of withstanding the demanding work they will be subjected to.  

There are strategic materials and components in the space sector that can only be manufactured by advanced manufacturing in a specific way. Rubén García, project manager of HIP at Hiperbaric, noted that “These developments need very advanced, complex, and processed materials that are capable of withstanding the demanding work they will be subjected to. Therefore, advanced processes are needed to ensure and certify that these materials can be part of a satellite or rocket.” In addition to elements that form part of satellites and rockets and their respective engines, turbomachines, burners, and more intended for space also see benefits from HIP processing. 

Rocket engine treated by HIP Technology
Source: Hiperbaric

An X-ray inspection of each part evaluates the suitability of the component and ensures that it will not fail during the combustion process. “If we find any pores in the part, they are repaired with HIP technology, which repairs and densifies the component,” explains García. The HIP technology supplier uses Fast Cooling technology to cool materials very quickly, especially in materials whose capabilities may be impaired if they are not cooled quickly.  

Emphasizing how HIP is the key that takes components to space, García describes, “The more complex qualification components are required to go through a HIP process to ensure that the component will not fail. Materials engineering and the metallurgical process are closely tied to these innovations to ensure what some processes can’t do 100%. That is where HIP becomes our best ally.” 

Hiperbaric has devoted a HIP press for its HIP Innovation Center in Spain for companies worldwide for the purpose of investigating and developing HIP products with a particular focus on the aeronautical sector. Here, companies will find the help and knowledge required to achieve success.

About the Expert: 

Rubén García Reizábal
HIP Project Manager 
Hiperbaric

Rubén García Reizábal is an industrial engineer with a master’s degree in Material Components and Durability of Structures and has recently obtained his PhD. After his first stage in Hiperbaric, where he held the position of Quality Manager, he has been working as project manager of several R&D projects for more than 11 years. In this role, he leads all the actions of the Spanish-based company related to its hot isostatic pressing (HIP) business line, including R&D and business development efforts. 

Contact Rubén at r.garcia@hiperbaric.com

HIP: Technology that Takes Components into Space  Read More »

Back to Basics Before Heat Treat Boot Camp

OCIt's always a good idea to review the building blocks of the heat treat industry. In preparation for Heat Treat Boot Camp, get back to the basics to be ready for these five topics: Products, Processes, Players, Markets, and Materials. Take a look or listen to any of these 10 resources in this Technical Tuesday original content compilation to be geared up for Heat Treat Boot Camp.

See you in Pittsburgh on October 31st!


Products

Here's a look at one type of product that is used in heat treatment processes: a mesh belt heat treatment system. This article takes a look at advancements in improving fastener quality:

1. "Mesh Belt Heat Treatment System Advancements for Automotive Fastener Production"

Processes

Learn how nitriding and ferritic nitrocarburizing processes differ in this in-depth article. Keep it simple by referring to the easy-to-understand chart within the piece:

2. "Nitriding vs. FNC"

Players

At Heat Treat Boot Camp, the players in the industry will be discussed. Who are the movers and shakers? Here are some resources with a sampling:

3. "3 Aspirational Heat Treat Legends"

4. Heat Treat Radio #32: A Discussion with Jean-François Cloutier, Nitrex CEO

5. Heat Treat Radio #7: Former Bodycote CEO Re-Enters Heat Treat Market

Markets

The aerospace, automotive, energy, and medical markets are constantly evolving and improving. Just to keep the markets fresh in the mind, here is the latest technical item from each:

6. Aerospace. "Vacuum Gas Cooling: Pressure vs. Velocity, Part 1 of 2"

7. Automotive. "Guide To Conducting SATs According to CQI-9 4th Edition"

8. Energy. "Harnessing the Sun: A Heat Treat Case Study with General Atomics"

9. Medical. "Hot Take on HIPing"

Materials

This interview digs in to aluminum and different types of steel. A bit of a history lesson appears here too, as the raw materials are examined:

10. Heat Treat Radio #76: "Lunch & Learn with Heat Treat Today – Mill Processes and Production, Part 1"


Find heat treating products and services when you search on Heat Treat Buyers Guide.com


 

Back to Basics Before Heat Treat Boot Camp Read More »

Research at Oregon Manufacturing Innovation Center Advances with HIP Technology

HTD Size-PR LogoWhen the new additive research facility at the Oregon Manufacturing Innovation Center Research & Development (OMIC R&D) opens in Scappoose, Oregon, the facility will acquire a hot isostatic press. Operating at a temperature of 2550°F (1400°C) and a pressure of up to 30,000 psi (2070 bar), the new press will give OMIC researchers the ability to study densification of metals as well as how HPHT can modify the grain structure to enhance the mechanical properties of additively manufactured parts.

Overseen by Oregon Institute of Technology (Oregon Tech), a public polytechnic university, OMIC R&D is a collaborative effort that brings together industry and higher education with government support to conduct applied research and advanced technical training. Its mission is to increase industrial competitiveness by developing new tools and techniques to address today’s manufacturing challenges, particularly in the aerospace and defense, transportation, and metals sectors.

The Quintus Technologies HIP, a QIH 48 M URC® press, will allow new research into 3D printing technology and optimized material properties. The press model is equipped with Uniform Rapid Cooling, URC®, the proprietary Quintus feature that combines HIP and heat treatment in a single process. Accelerated cooling under pressure minimizes thermal distortion and improves material properties. The QIH 48 also has a hot zone of 14.8 inches (375 mm) in diameter and 47.2 inches (1200 mm) in height.

“For OMIC R&D to fulfill our mission, we must have world-class cutting-edge capabilities to support our applied research & development projects. We accomplish this by partnering with some of the best companies in the world in their respective fields and identifying and utilizing their unique technologies and expertise. Our solutions can be implemented by regional, national, and international partners to increase their competitiveness,” says Craig Campbell, executive director at OMIC. “We chose Quintus as a partner because the company is continually innovating, and developing new processes such as High Pressure Heat Treatment, or HPHT.”

The press will be housed in OMIC’s new 30,000-square-foot additive manufacturing innovation center in Scappoose, approximately 20 miles north of Portland. Scheduled for ground-breaking in late 2021 and occupancy in 2022, the facility will be adjacent to the Portland Community College/OMIC Training Center, which serves students in machining, fabrication, and mechatronics.

“Today’s globally competitive manufacturing industry demands rapid innovations in advanced manufacturing technologies to produce complex, high-performance products at low cost,” observes Dr. Mostafa Saber, associate professor of Manufacturing & Mechanical Engineering Technology at Oregon Tech. “To conduct world-class, competitive research on new high-performance metal alloys, long-lasting tools, and rapid production of complex metal structures, especially in additive manufacturing, materials densification plays a pivotal role. And that is where the advanced generation of hot isostatic pressing offers the solution. We are very excited to leverage the advantageous features offered by Quintus Technologies soon at OMIC R&D.”

 

Research at Oregon Manufacturing Innovation Center Advances with HIP Technology Read More »

Fusing the Heat Treat Practices with Human Creativity

OC Creation requires endurance and continued hard work. Find out what creative applications and research services your colleagues are committed to bringing from across the heat treat industry.

These innovations could bring the next level of innovation to your industrial plants. Enjoy!


Novel Mechanical Testing Systems Powered By Finite-Element Analysis, Optimization Algorithms, and Machine Learning

- An excerpt from a Heat Treat Radio episode with James Dean -

Doug Glenn:  You may have already stated this a little bit, but briefly: indentation plastometry is basically taking an indentation to be able to test, not just hardness or not even necessarily hardness, but the deformation or the strain of material.  Do you have to know the microstructure of the material when you’re doing these tests?

James Dean:  That’s a good question.  In principle, no.  If we were to dig deep into the mechanics of what’s going on within our system and our software package, you’d come to recognize that it’s, from a mathematical point of view at least, insensitive to microstructural features.  There is a numerical method underlying this – a finite-element analysis – therefore, treating this as a continuum system doesn’t take account explicitly of the microstructure.

When you’re doing the test, it’s actually helpful to know something about the microstructure simply because our technology is all about extracting bulk mechanical behavior engineering properties.  Therefore, when we do our indentation test, it is important that we are indenting a representative volume of the material.

It is important that we are capturing all of the microstructural features that give rise to the behavior you would measure in a microscopic stress strain test.  Otherwise, you can’t pull out those bulk, core engineering properties, and therefore, the scale on which you do the indent is important.  Your indenter has to be large relative to the scale of the microstructure.  So, it’s only at that level that you need to understand or know anything about the microstructure.

DG:  This test is a nondestructive test, right?  You said you can actually test live materials, correct?

JD:  Yes.

DG:  You don’t have to destroy them, you don’t have to machine them, you don’t have to make them into something you can rip apart, right?

JD:  Right.

Read/Listen to the full interview here.


Bert demonstrates the benefits of working with a collaborative robot to induction harden steel parts. The robot gives the operator the ability to work directly next to it, as opposed to conventional robot arms where fencing and distance is required.

Robotic Revolution

- An excerpt from Metal Treating Institute Member Profiles with Penna Flame Industries -

The computerized robotic surface hardening systems have revolutionized the surface hardening industry. These advanced robots, coupled with programmable index tables, provide an automation system that helps decrease production time while maintaining the highest quality in precision surface hardening.

A few benefits of this service are:

  • Increased wear resistance
  • Higher hardness and longer life
  • Less processing time
  • Higher efficiency and productivity
  • Maintain tensile strength
  • Quick turnaround of the project
  • Consistent, repeatable process
  • Less distortion when compared to furnace treatment

Read the full article here.


High Pressure Break Through For Additive Manufacturing

- An excerpt from a Heat Treat Radio episode with Johan Hjärne -

DG:  Doing it all- stress relief, HIP, age, or whatever. Just for clarity sake, you’ve got a typical HIP process, you’re going to heat it up, put it under very high pressure, then, normally, if you didn’t have the high pressure heat treatment capabilities, you would have to cool that part down which is typically cooled quite slowly in a conventional HIP unit, taking more time and whatnot.  It then comes down to ambient, or close to ambient, where it can be held, you take it out, you put it back in another furnace (a normal furnace, not a HIP furnace), take the temperature back up, get it to the point where you want it, quick cool it, quench it, to a certain extent, to get the characteristics that you’re looking for, and you’re done.  What we’re talking about here is the combination of those two processes plus potential other things like stress relief, and all that, in a single unit, correct?

JH:  Yes.  This has very beneficial effects on time.  Many of the HIP vendors do not have HIP and heat treatment in the same facility.  Now we have sold a couple of units to some new HIP vendors that have this capacity, but, historically, the HIP vendors didn’t have both HIP and heat treatment.  First, the customer had to send it to a service provider for HIPing, they got the part back, they had to send it to somebody that could do the heat treat step, and then got the part back, and so on.  The time, and specifically for additive manufacturing, is important.  Keep in mind they can do a part pretty fast, anywhere between a day to two days, worst case a week, but then having to wait week after week after week to get the part back for the HIPing or for the heat treating.

DG:  So there’s a substantial, potential time savings, for sure; not just process savings in between furnaces, but the fact that you can buy one furnace and do both of those things.

Let’s talk for just a second about what types of products are most effectively HIPed and/or, if we can, high pressure heat treated.

JH:  As I said before, we really started to realize the potential with this technology with the additive manufacturing world.  That is were we started to realized that we can actually make a difference here.  Not only does it have a beneficial effect for the total time, but having the components under elevated temperature for a shorter period of time is actually beneficial for the microstructure; the grain doesn’t grow as much.

Read/Listen to the full interview here.


Modernizing Tech

- An excerpt from Metal Treating Institute Member Profiles with Franklin Brazing and Metal Treating -

Recent improvements include a new cooling tower, chiller system, enhanced duct work, LED lighting in the plant, a renovated breakroom for the associates, a quality room for the engineering staff, a new HVAC system for the front offices, and upgrades in technology systems.

The updated technology is not only used for improving efficiency and data analysis, but also for communication. It has been key to improving operations and has had a significant impact on relationships with clients. Franklin’s ability to effectively communicate enhances collaboration, which allows FBMT’s clients to more efficiently manage their supply chains, reduce the cost of rework and scrap, and better serve their clients.

Read the full article here.

Fusing the Heat Treat Practices with Human Creativity Read More »

Heat Treat Radio #59: HIP & High Pressure Heat Treat with Johan Hjärne, Quintus Technologies

Heat Treat Radio host Doug Glenn sits down to talk with Johan Hjärne about high pressure heat treating and an e-book recently published by Heat Treat Today in cooperation with Quintus Technologies. Learn more about high pressure heat treating in this informative interview.

Below, you can either listen to the podcast by clicking on the audio play button, or you can read an edited transcript.

 



The following transcript has been edited for your reading enjoyment.

Doug  Glenn (DG): For this edition of Heat Treat Radio, I have the great pleasure of sitting down with Johan Hjärne (JH) from Quintus Technologies.  Let's give the listeners a sense of who you are, how long you've been in the industry and your experience with HIPing.  If you don't mind, please introduce yourself.

JH:  Absolutely, thank you so much, Doug, for that introduction.  My name is Johan Hjärne and I work for Quintus Technologies.  I've been with the company for around 10 years now. I started up where we have our head office, which is in Västerås, Sweden, 10 years ago as an R&D manager there. Later, I had other roles like product manager for our hot isostatic presses.  I also worked as a global business development manager, responsible for the strategies for a couple of years, and since four years ago, I'm now the business unit director for Quintus Technologies here in the American region.   I am responsible for our hot and cold isostatic presses and also our other business unit which is called Sheet Metal Forming Presses.  Before I joined Quintus, I worked within the aerospace industry for 10 years.

DG:  I've been to your office, but I want everyone else to know:  You guys are located just north of Columbus, Ohio.

To learn more about HIPing, download this free ebook.

JH:  That's absolutely correct.  It is a little suburb of Columbus called Lewis Center just north of Columbus.

DG:  The reason we decided to get together on this podcast was because you and I and our respective teams have just successfully completed the publication of an eBook, which basically we've entitled “High Pressure Heat Treatment.”  It deals with HIPing and some other things.  So, that's the occasion for this meeting.  I want to ask you to discuss, briefly, with us about high pressure heat treating.  What is it and why did we decide to do this eBook on it?

JH:  A very good question.  As I indicated before, I have a background in the aerospace industry and when I worked there we were responsible for some components in a jet engine.  We had big castings and we typically 'HIPed and shipped' these castings.  HIPing, to at least us in the aerospace where I worked at the time, was like a black box.  We really didn't know.  We knew that the results were better if we HIPed, we could use less material, the material got stronger, etc, etc.  So, when I started at Quintus, at the same time we had made some progress with increasing the cooling rate in our HIP system.

A HIP system basically works in a way where you apply a high temperature and high pressure and then you cool down, and during this process you take away the pores.  We had realized that the cooling part of this cycle could be shortened drastically with some updates of the equipment.  At the same time, additive manufacturing started to grow.  They started, after awhile, to understand and realize that even though the process of additive manufacturing is a brilliant process, (you can do fantastic things in a short period of time), many times they ended up with porosity in the parts.

The aerospace industry, the medical implant industry, and others required that these pores be taken away.  So, they reached out to us and wondered what we could do about this.  When we said that the HIP cycle is perfect, you can remove the porosity from your part, they started to ask questions like, “Why do I need to heat treat it afterwards?  Why do I need to do something else afterwards?  Isn't this enough without gas to remove the porosity?”   That is where we started to add one and one together to see, well, the cooling rates we can apply in our modern HIP system might actually be good enough to do this heat treat section.  So, for materials that were suitable for this, we started to elaborate, and that is how we started to work with this and development it more and more.

DG:  Let's talk about the difference, then, between traditionally HIPing and what this high pressure heat treatment is.  Process-wise, what is the difference?

JH:  Process-wise, as I explained a little bit briefly before, the HIP process is basically increasing the temperature in the furnace, or in the pressure vessel, and then we apply a high pressure.  After the material has been under these conditions, we need to cool the pressure vessel to be able to take out these parts.  The next step, in many cases, is a similar heat treat process, but without any pressure.  So, basically, after the HIP step, you take out the parts from the HIP and you redo almost the same cycle, without pressure, just to be able to cool it faster and get the correct material properties.  When we realized that this cooling step was high enough and that we can do it already in the HIP system, then we could basically remove that subsequent solutionizing step.  Basically, it is applying the same cooling rate, as they had in the solutionized step, directly in the HIP unit.  Combining these two is what we call high pressure heat treatment.

The systems we have are also capable of running pressure and temperature independently.  If we take an additive part which is being printed on a build plate, you can, in principle, take that build plate, put it in one of our HIP systems, you can run a stress relief cycle to begin with where you only use an elevated temperature without any pressure whatsoever, you can increase the pressure and the temperature when you want to go into the HIP cycle, you can quench it down to do the solutionizing step and you can even, if you find it reasonable, do an aging step.  This whole process could, in principle, remove four different steps.  It is always a question of do you want to take the whole build plate and do that, or do you want to remove the parts from the build plate before you HIP and heat treat it, and so on and so forth.  That is always up to the customers.  The machines we provide are capable of taking care of the whole process, of doing it all.

DG:  Doing it all- stress relief, HIP, age, or whatever. Just for clarity sake, you've got a typical HIP process, you're going to heat it up, put it under very high pressure, then, normally, if you didn't have the high pressure heat treatment capabilities, you would have to cool that part down which is typically cooled quite slowly in a conventional HIP unit, taking more time and whatnot.  It then comes down to ambient, or close to ambient, where it can be held, you take it out, you put it back in another furnace (a normal furnace, not a HIP furnace), take the temperature back up, get it to the point where you want it, quick cool it, quench it, to a certain extent, to get the characteristics that you're looking for, and you're done.  What we're talking about here is the combination of those two processes plus potential other things like stress relief, and all that, in a single unit, correct?

JH:  Yes.  This has very beneficial effects on time.  Many of the HIP vendors do not have HIP and heat treatment in the same facility.  Now we have sold a couple of units to some new HIP vendors that have this capacity, but, historically, the HIP vendors didn't have both HIP and heat treatment.  First, the customer had to send it to a service provider for HIPing, they got the part back, they had to send it to somebody that could do the heat treat step, and then got the part back, and so on.  The time, and specifically for additive manufacturing, is important.  Keep in mind they can do a part pretty fast, anywhere between a day to two days, worst case a week, but then having to wait week after week after week to get the part back for the HIPing or for the heat treating.

DG:  So there's a substantial, potential time savings, for sure; not just process savings in between furnaces, but the fact that you can buy one furnace and do both of those things.

Let's talk for just a second about what types of products are most effectively HIPed and/or, if we can, high pressure heat treated.

JH:  As I said before, we really started to realize the potential with this technology with the additive manufacturing world.  That is were we started to realized that we can actually make a difference here.  Not only does it have a beneficial effect for the total time, but having the components under elevated temperature for a shorter period of time is actually beneficial for the microstructure; the grain doesn't grow as much.  You can take the example, again, with the first HIP cycle with having that at a certain temperature, you cool it down slowly then you heat it up again to the same high temperature for a period of time before you quench it down.  Well, then you exaggerate the component for high temperature under a much longer period.  If you can do that in just one step, the component doesn't have to be in as high a temperature for such a long period of time which means that the grains don't grow as much which gives you a better microstructure and better material properties.  That is one effect.

Another effect that we have realized is very beneficial is that when you're dealing with additive manufacturing, you end up, specifically if it's laser powder bed fusion, you end up with Argon in the pores and  Argon cannot be dissolved into the material.  With a HIPing process, the Argon pores are basically eliminated, in a way.  However, if you heat it up again, these pores start to grow and they can grow back again and be bigger.  So, if you remove that heat treat step afterwards, you don't have to be afraid of this pore growth again.  That's another beneficial effect, from a metallurgical standpoint, that we have realized.

Additive manufacturing is very well suited for this.  With that said, now we see a more increasing interest from the casting side, as well.  With these new modern HIP units we have, we can cool with velocities of several thousand  degrees per minute, a little dependent on what size, etc., but this has a very good effect on the microstructures on suitable materials like nickel-base super alloys and titanium aluminides, etc.  The casting side is now starting to get very, very interested in this technology, as well, because basically it didn't exist before.  We see a huge potential and we have seen an immense growth of requests for this technology the last couple of years.

DG:  How about just straight powder metal?  I know you're talking 3-D, but how about just straight powder metal manufacturing, because those parts tend to be a bit more porous than your normal wrought products, and things of that sort?

JH:  If you talk about powder metallurgy and HIP, you typically need to have everything canned, in a way.  Powder metallurgy, we call it near-net shape, for example, where you weld structures to a certain shape or form, you fill that with powder and then you HIP it and out comes a part which basically has a perfect microstructure.  We haven't come so far yet to start to evaluate how that will be with this high pressure heat treat, but what we have seen with the interest of this is that a lot of the HIP cycles were developed many, many years ago.  At the time, they didn't have the cooling capacity we have today and they ended up with cycles which were good, they took away the porosity.  However, with the capability to modify both the temperature and the pressure, you can come to the same fully dense part.  I'm over exaggerating  a little bit, but if you have a high temperature, you can have a lower pressure.  If you have a lower temperature, you can increase the pressure.  So, we have also focused on having a very high pressure on all of our equipment because then you have this flexibility to get to the fully dense part in the best way.  This is something I'm absolutely convinced that the powder metallurgy industry would be interested in and evaluating more, as well.

DG:  For the people who might be interested in testing a part, or something like that, are there size restraints?  Typically, what type of workzone are we talking about in a standard Quintus HIP unit?

JH:  If we talk about today, what we have on the market for relatively high cooling rates, if we're talking cooling rates in the 200-300 C/minute or 400-500, almost 600 F/minute, the production units are at 2 feet diameter, give or take (660 mm), and around 6 feet high.  But this is something that the next generation we are developing right now, we are approaching a meter and more than that, as well.   So, it's just a matter of time to grow this.  We've seen that there is the highest interest on the additive manufacturing market, which is why we have focused on that to begin with, now we're doing higher and I do not see any limitations in going up in diametrical size for this.

DG:  But it is exponentially more difficult as you get wider, yes?

JH:  Yes.  It's a good comment you make.  You have a much higher volume that you need to cool down.    But, for the cooling rates, we see, at least today, most applicable where we talk about these, as I said, 200-300 C/minute, we definitely see possibilities to go over a meter in diameter and then we have large production sized HIP units.  We do HIP units that are much bigger than that but if you start to get over 1 ½ meter and even bigger, then you're absolutely correct, then the cooling rates are drastically lower.

DG:  Could you describe, for those who may not have ever seen or understand a HIP unit, and most specifically, a high pressure heat treatment HIP unit, what does it look like?

JH:  I can start with a pressure vessel, basically.  It's basically a cylinder where you put a furnace in and in this cylinder you can increase the pressure and in the furnace you can increase the temperature so you create a pressure vessel with high pressure and high temperature.

DG:  And Johan, we're talking, typically, a vertical cylinder?

JH:  Correct.

DG:  And this high pressure vessel has a wall thickness of ….. ?

JH:  That is a good question, Doug.  Depending on size, of course, the wall thickness can be anywhere from a couple of inches to maybe the biggest wall thickness we have now is up to 200 millimeters, or something like that.  Don't hold me to these numbers.  But, the important thing is that you can do a pressure vessel design in two ways:  Either you can use a very thick-walled cylinder to contain the high pressure, or you can do a thin-walled pressure vessel, and that is where the big difference is.  At Quintus Technologies, we use a thin-walled pressure vessel and we apply a wire winding technology.  So we pre stress this cylinder with a wire, but we can also apply cooling next to or in direct contact with this pressure vessel.  What we do is create a heat exchanger with our whole system.  We also apply cooling in the lower closures and in the upper closures so what you have is a water controlled pressure vessel with a furnace in and then we can actively control how fast we would like to cool the unit with controlling the cooling of the pressure vessel.

DG:  I'm imaging, right away, thermal shock written all over this thing.  You've got a high pressure, a vessel that's at high temperature and all of a sudden you guys slam in there because you want to drop temperatures 300-400 C, 400-500 F/minute, I'm seeing a lot of thermal shock going on.  How do you deal with that?

JH:  The gas that we are working with is Argon.  Argon has an extremely good thermal conductivity.  At high temperature it, sort of, takes care of the densification process in a very good way because it takes the heat from the gas into the material.  What we then use is the colder gas in the lower region and we basically force that cold gas up into the furnace.  But we don't do that with any specific high velocity.  The velocities in  pressure vessels are pretty moderate and continuous.  And, of course, we have requirements on the pressure vessel wall.  The pressure vessel walls are strictly monitored and controlled so they can never exceed certain temperatures.  That's where we have our, sort of, safety function and control function.

We don't see any challenges with thermal shock.  The alternative of having a thick-walled cylinder might have bigger challenges when you cool from one side.  Then, you can end up with other challenges like thermal cracks, etc.  But using a thin-walled solution as we do, we don't see any issues with this.

DG:  The other major issue I would think you'd have with thick walls is you probably wouldn't be able to reach the cooling rates that you're talking about because you've got a huge heat sink sucking up all of that cold air.

A company that might be thinking about bringing this HIPing thing in-house and do high pressure heat treatment in-house, are they going to have to have any operational expertise?  In other words, do you need to hire a PhD from Harvard, or someone like that, to operate this unit?

JH:  No.  Operating a HIP unit like this is not, according to Quintus, more difficult than operating other heat treat furnaces in any way.  Of course you need a touch and feel for the unit, how it works, etc.  This is taken care of during training when we deliver the systems.  You don't have to have any PhD from Harvard to run and operate these units.

Doug, you've been in our Lewis Center office, and we have an application lab there.  If someone is interested, we are more than wiling to take on customers or somebody that just wants to know more about the technology and take a look at it.  They're more than welcome to contact me or Quintus and come and visit us.

The market is starting to get these machines out for operation.  If you are a customer that would like to try these out and have a part that is bigger than our small lab furnaces can do, there are service providers out there on the market that can do this.  We have companies like Accurate Grazing in Greenville, SC that have a couple of these units.  We have Paulo up in Cleveland, OH and on the west coast we have Stack Metallurgical in Portland, OR.  Even Canada has their first really fast unit now with Burloak and also Mexico has a company called HT-MX. For the bigger companies that decide to outsource, or any company that decides to outsource, this is a technology that is out there on the market.

DG:  Your lab there in Lewis Center will help process or 'part validate', I assume, if somebody is interested in that?  They can bring an idea, a problem or a part in development to you and you'll say, “Yes, here's what we can do and we can prove it by running it.”

JH:  Absolutely.  We have the thought that if somebody wants to evaluate this and are willing to work a little bit with us and maybe we can get some information back, we have this as a service for free.  We are not a service provider in the sense that we compete with our customers, but if someone wants to evaluate the technology and are willing to talk with us and listen to us, this is a service we do for free.

DG:  I'm going to ask you about giving out additional information where people can go to get more information, but I would like to let the listeners know that if you go to www.heattreattoday.com and in the search box just type in 'HIP' or 'HIPing' or 'hot isostatic pressing', you'll see a pretty healthy list of articles that appear there that aren't necessarily specific to high pressure heat treatment, just HIPing generally, but certainly there are articles there about high pressure heat treating, as well, from Quintus.  You can also type Quintus into the search box and you would come up with quite a few things because you guys have provided us with some good content.

That's one place you can go if you want to find out more information.  Johan, where can they go, what are you comfortable giving out as far as contact information for you and/or Quintus?

JH:  Regarding information, they can go to our homepage, of course, Quintustechnologies.com.   And don't forget the eBook, Doug.  That's a very good description of HIPing.  If you want to know more, download the eBook.  That has a good description of not only high pressure heat treatment, but also HIPing and a little bit of history of HIPing.

Otherwise, you can contact me by going to the Quintus homepage and find contact information for me.  We also have the application lab in Lewis Center.  If it has to do with HIPing, it will end up in my in-box, sooner or later.

DG:  You've got a good team there, by the way.  We know some of your other folks who you work with that are very good people.  If you're a listener and you're interested, you want to go to the Quintustechnologies.com homepage.  You can search for Johan Hjärne  on the Quintus homepage and you'll get Johan's contact information.

And yes, you make a very good point, don't forget the eBook on Heat Treat Today's site.  You can get there simply by typing into your browser- www.heattreattoday.com/ebook and you'll go to our eBook homepage which has two eBooks on there right now, the most recent being the one from Quintus.

JH:  I would also like to add something.  We talked an awful lot about the U.S., but if there are any listeners from the rest of the world, we have an application lab where we have our head office in  Västerås, Sweden, as well.  That lab is even a little bit better equipped that our lab is, so that's a fantastic opportunity if you're not situated here in North America.  We also have connections in China and Japan, but you can find more information about that on our homepage.

DG: Johan, thank you so much. Great to talk with you, thanks for your time.

Doug Glenn, Publisher, Heat Treat Today
Doug Glenn, Publisher, Heat Treat Today

 

 

Heat Treat Radio #59: HIP & High Pressure Heat Treat with Johan Hjärne, Quintus Technologies Read More »