Effect of hardness on three very different forms of wear


Autoria(s): Gore, GJ; Gates, JD
Data(s)

01/01/1997

Resumo

Different abrasive wear tests have been applied to materials with hardnesses ranging from 80 HV (aluminium) to 1700 HV (tungsten carbide). The tests were: dry sand rubber wheel (DSRbrW); a similar test using a steel wheel (DSStlW); a new combined impact-abrasion test (FIA). The DSRbrW results were as expected, giving generally decreasing wear with increasing hardness. White cast irons and tool steels containing coarse, hard carbide particles performed better than more homogeneous materials of comparable hardness. When normalized to load and distance, the DSStlW results for the homogeneous materials were similar to the DSRbrW results. The multi-phase materials performed poorly in the DSStlW test, with volume loss for high-speed steel (880 HV) higher than that of aluminium. Within this group, wear increased with increasing hardness. These unexpected results are explained in terms of (a) differential friction coefficients of wheel and specimen, (b) increased fracture of sand, and (c) introduction of microfracture wear mechanisms. The FIA combined impact-abrasion results lacked clear correlations with hardness. The span of relative wear rates was similar to that reported for materials in ball mills. White cast irons at maximum hardness performed fairly poorly and showed evidence of microfracture. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science S.A.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:57599

Idioma(s)

eng

Palavras-Chave #Engineering, Mechanical #Materials Science, Multidisciplinary #Three-body Abrasion #Impact-abrasion #Hardness #Microstructure #Particle Kinematics #Alloy White Cast Irons #3-body Abrasive Wear #White Cast Irons #Mechanisms #Particles #Tester
Tipo

Journal Article