Abstract

Recently, modified surface treatment methods for cutting tools were developed combining a heat treatment and a subsequent hard coating (duplex treatment). As a consequence, the wear resistance has been improved considerably. As fatigue is an important failure mechanism during application, the present paper focuses on the improvement of the fatigue behavior by an optimization of heat treatment and hard coating. The problem is approached in two steps: first, the fatigue behavior of high-speed tool steel S6-5-2 is investigated, surface-treated with different plasma heat treatments (plasma nitriding and -carbonitriding). The results on bending fatigue testing indicate the superiority of plasma nitriding compared with both plasma carbonitriding and untreated substrate. Hence, in a second step the plasma nitrided tool steel is coated with PACVD hard coatings of the system Ti-Al-C-N and the fatigue behavior of these hard coating steel compounds is investigated. Obviously, the type and stoichiometry of the hard coating influence the fatigue behavior of the compound. For TiC x N 1− x films, the fatigue strength increases with increasing carbon content, whereas for Ti 1− x Al x N-films, the fatigue strength decreases with increasing Al content. While for an optimized hard coating the fatigue behavior of the compound is superior to hardened non-nitrided steel, no significant improvement was found as compared with plasma nitrided steel.

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