Abstract

Efforts to improve the wear properties of sintered high speed steels have made use of the simultaneous addition of hard ceramic particles (TiC or NbC) alongside particles which might act as a solid lubricant (MnS or CaF 2 ). Preliminary investigations carried out to study interactions between such particles and a sintered high speed steel matrix indicated that the steel matrix carbides were modified by a chemical reaction which occurred between the added ceramic particles and the high speed steel matrix the result of which was to give a substantial improvement in hardness. The solid lubricant remained chemically unaltered by the sintering process, and tended to reduce hardness. Both types of particulate addition raised the sintering temperature needed to achieve full density due to their effect on solidus and liquidus temperatures

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