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What is quenching, tempering, normalizing and annealing?

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Quenching, annealing, normalizing, and tempering are four common heat treatment processes. Today, we will give you a detailed introduction to what quenching, annealing, normalizing, and tempering are, as well as their purposes and applications.

What is quenching?

Quenching is a metallurgical processing technique used to improve the hardness and wear resistance of metal materials. It involves heating the material to a certain temperature and then cooling it at a rate greater than the critical cooling rate to increase the material’s hardness.

The purpose of quenching

  1. To improve the mechanical performance of metal materials or components. For example, increasing the hardness and wear resistance of tools, bearings, etc., increasing the elastic limit of springs, improving the comprehensive mechanical performance of shaft components, etc.
  2. Improving the material performance or chemical performance of certain special steels. For example, improving the corrosion resistance of stainless steel, increasing the permanent magnetism of magnetic steel, etc.

Vacuum quenching is mainly divided into air quenching and oil quenching:

 

What is tempering?

Tempering heats the quenched workpiece to the proper temperature, holds it for a number of hours, and then cools it slowly or rapidly. It is generally used to reduce or eliminate the internal stresses in the quenched workpiece, or to reduce its hardness and strength to improve its ductility or toughness. After quenching, the workpiece should be tempered in time, through the quenching and tempering together, in order to obtain the required mechanical properties.

The purpose of tempering

Types of tempering

 

What is normalizing?

Normalizing is the process of heating a material to a certain temperature and holding it for a period of time, then cooling it to room temperature. Its purpose is to remove internal stresses and enhance the material’s organization and properties.

Normalizing applications

  1. For low carbon steel, the normalized hardness is slightly higher than the annealed hardness, and the toughness is better, so it can be used as a pretreatment for cutting.
  2. For medium-carbon steel, instead of tempering (quenching + high-temperature tempering) as the final heat treatment, can also be used as a preparatory treatment before surface quenching with the induction heating method.
  3. For tool steel, bearing steel, carburized steel, etc., it can reduce or inhibit the formation of reticulated carbide, so as to obtain the good organization required for spheroidal annealing.
  4. Used for cast steel parts, can refine the cast state organization, and improve the cutting performance.
  5. For large forgings, it can be used as the final heat treatment, thus avoiding the larger cracking tendency during quenching.
  6. Used for ductile iron, so that the hardness, strength, and wear resistance is improved, such as for the manufacture of cars, tractors, diesel engines, crankshaft, connecting rods, and other important parts.
  7. Normalizing before spheroidizing and annealing of peri-eutectoidal steel can eliminate the reticulated secondary carburizing body to ensure that all carburizing bodies are spheroidized during spheroidizing and annealing.

Since the normalizing is cooling by air, so the ambient temperature, stacking, airflow, and workpiece size have an effect on the properties after normalizing.

 

What is annealing?

Annealing is the process of slowly cooling a heat-treated metal material to reduce its strength and hardness. Its purpose is to restore the toughness and plasticity of the material in order to improve its machinability.

The purpose of annealing

Types of annealing

 

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