Effect of Cooling Rate on Microstructure of In Situ TiC-Reinforced Composite Surface Layers Synthesized on Ductile Cast Iron by Laser Alloying

Materials (Basel). 2024 Feb 17;17(4):932. doi: 10.3390/ma17040932.

Abstract

The microstructure of the in situ TiC-reinforced composite surface layers developed during laser surface alloying of a ductile cast iron substrate with titanium was related to the solidification conditions in the molten pool. The solidification conditions were estimated using infrared thermography. It was found that the cooling rates of the melt up to about 700 °C/s enable the complete reaction between carbon and the entire amount of titanium introduced into the molten pool. In turn, the cooling rate of about 280 °C/s for the melt containing 8.0 wt% Ti allows the TiC particles to grow in the dendritic form with well-developed secondary arms and a total size of up to 30 µm. For a constant Ti content, the cooling rate of the melt had no effect on the TiC fraction. The increase in the cooling rate elevated the retained austenite fraction in the matrix material, lowering its hardness.

Keywords: cementite; cooling rate; ductile cast iron; in situ composite; laser surface alloying; thermography; titanium carbide.

Grants and funding

Publication was supported by the scholarship fund of the Silesian University of Technology, in the year 2023.