Abstract

Various kinds of stainless steels have been widely utilized as a die for mold- and direct-stamping processes of optical oxide glasses. Since they suffered from high temperature transients and thermal cycles in practice, they must be surface-treated by dry and wet coatings, or, by plasma nitriding. Martensitic stainless steel mold was first wet plated by the nickel phosphate (NiP), which was unstable at the high temperature stamping condition; and, was easy to crystalize or to fracture by itself. This issue of nuisance significantly lowered the productivity in fabrication of optical oxide-glass elements. In the present paper, the stainless steel mold was surface-treated by the low-temperature plasma nitriding. The nitrided layer by this surface modification had higher nitrogen solute content than 4 mass%; the maximum solid-solubility of nitrogen is usually 0.1 mass% in the equilibrium phase diagram. Owing to this solid-solution with high nitrogen concentration, the nitrided layer had high hardness over 1400 HV within its thickness of 50 μm without any formation of nitrides after plasma nitriding at 693 K for 14.4 ks. This plasma-nitrided mold was utilized for mold-stamping of two colored oxide glass plates at 833 K; these plates were successfully deformed and joined into a single glass plate by this stamping without adhesion or galling of oxide glasses onto the nitrided mold surface.

Highlights

  • Various kinds of stainless steels have been widely utilized as a mold-die for injection molding of plastics and for moldand direct-stamping processes of optical oxide glasses

  • Since the glasstransition temperature (Tg) of oxide glasses is much higher than plastics, most of molds must be coated or plasma nitrided to build up the hardened layer with heat resistance and endurance against galling [3]

  • The solid-solution hardened stainless steels by low temperature plasma nitriding work as a heat resistant mold for hot stamping and injection molding of oxide glasses and high-Tg plastics. This mold with the nitrided layer thickness over 50 lm and the surface hardness over 1400 HV by nitriding at 693 K for 14.4 ks or 4 h, is attractive for mold-stamping of optical elements since it is free from hot galling and severe abrasive wear

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Summary

Introduction

Various kinds of stainless steels have been widely utilized as a mold-die for injection molding of plastics and for moldand direct-stamping processes of optical oxide glasses. AISI316L austenitic stainless steels are employed as a mold-die for direct stamping of oxide glasses [2] In the former, heat treatment or case-hardening processes can afford to provide the sufficient hardness to molds, working around 500 K. In the latter, since the glasstransition temperature (Tg) of oxide glasses is much higher than plastics, most of molds must be coated or plasma nitrided to build up the hardened layer with heat resistance and endurance against galling [3].

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