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Ti-base alloys are technologically
important because of their high specific
strength and resistance against corrosion
in oxidizing environments. However, in many
applications (aerospace engineering,
biomedicine, sports, jewelry, architecture)
the performance of such alloys is severely
limited by their notoriously poor surface
hardness and scratch resistance, very high
friction coefficients and rapid wear, as
well as poor corrosion resistance in
reducing media. A powerful approach to
counter these deficiencies is to harden the
surface of Ti-alloy parts –
preferentially after they have
been formed into their final shape. Such
"case" hardening is most effectively
achieved by inward diffusion of
interstitial solutes, for example nitrogen.
However, titanium forms very
stable compounds with all relevant
interstitial solutes. Consequently,
conventional methods to case-harden Ti-base
alloys with interstitial solutes inevitably
produce precipitates (oxides, carbides, or
nitrides), which severely degrade
the wear-, fatigue-, and corrosion
resistance. Pioneering experiments by our
group have resulted in a new concept
enabling inward diffusion of nitrogen into
titanium based alloys from a gas phase
without precipitating detrimental
nitride particles. This new concept is
denoted as "nitridation under kinetic
control" [1,2] and has been successfully
implemented in two different processing
schemes, yielding precipitation-free cases
with nitrogen concentrations of up to
20 at\% and a tremendous increase in
surface hardness (Ti–6Al–4V: a
factor of 2, commercially pure Ti: a factor
of 8). To our knowledge, this is the first
time that highly concentrated homogeneous
solid solutions of interstitial nitrogen in
Ti-base alloys can be fabricated in a
controlled manner.
Ongoing research aims to study the
surface, microstructure, and fundamental
properties of these new and unusual
materials. Of particular interest are the
effects of nitridation on (i) the
surface (roughness, friction, wear),
(ii) the microstructure
(dislocation/twin density, lattice
expansion and residual stress, proportions
and spatial distribution of phases in
duplex alloys, texture),
(iii) plasticity and corresponding
micromechanisms (hardness, yield stress,
strain to failure, slip, twinning), and
(iv) corrosion resistance (in
oxidizing and reducing environments).
Moreover, we plan to model the diffusion
kinetics of nitrogen and the effect of
alloy composition on the thermodynamic
stability of the nitrogen solid solution
compared to nitride phases.
The scientific merit of this work is to
provide initial insight into the structure
and properties of unusual materials that
have not been available before. Obtaining a
fundamental understanding of the impact of
high nitrogen concentrations on the
thermodynamics, microstructure, mechanical,
and electrochemical properties is key for
exploring the full potential of a new
concept for improving the performance of a
very important class of structural alloys.
Moreover, the results will enable probing
the potential applicability of the new
concept to other important alloy
families.
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1. L. Liu, F. Ernst, G. M. Michal, and
A. H. Heuer: Surface Hardening of Ti
Alloys by Gas-Phase Nitridation: Kinetic
Control of the Nitrogen Surface
Activity. Metallurgical and Materials
Transaction A 36 (2005) 2429.
2. F. Ernst, G. M. Michal, F. Oba, L.
Liu, J. Blush, and A. H. Heuer:
Gas-Phase Surface Alloying under
``Kinetic Control,'' A Novel Approach to
Improving the Surface Properties of
Titanium Alloys. Zeitschrift für
Metallkunde, in press.
This
material is based upon work supported by
the National Science Foundation under Grant
No. DMR-0506711. Any opinions, findings, and
conclusions or recommendations expressed in
this material are those of the author(s)
and do not necessarily reflect the views of
the National Science Foundation.
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