The oxidation behavior of high-speed steel (HSS), which is used as the work rolls in hot strip mills, was examined under both wet and dry oxidation conditions. In a dry atmosphere, carbides as well as the marten-site matrix were oxidized, while only the matrix was oxidized in the wet atmosphere. After dry oxidation, the M2C-, M6C- and M7C 3-type carbides maintained their original shapes, while the MC-type carbides were oxidized into parallelepiped (orthorhombic) crystals. The parallelepiped oxides were easily removed from the sample surface due to their low adhesion strength. Double-layered oxides were formed after oxidizing the matrix, in dry as well as wet atmospheres. The outer layer showed a dense structure after dry oxidation, while a columnar and porous layer was formed in the wet atmosphere. In the early stages of oxidation, the high-speed steels oxidized following the parabolic rate law in both the dry and wet atmospheres. The parabolic weight change transformed to a linear one, when the oxide thickness was >1.3 μm by dry oxidation. The transition to a linear weight change was not observed in the wet oxidation. It is believed that, in a dry atmosphere, cracks occurred due to stress accumulation in the oxide layer, while the porous oxide layer hindered crack formation during wet oxidation.
CITATION STYLE
Kim, H. H., Lim, J. W., & Lee, J. J. (2003). Oxidation Behavior of High-speed Steels in Dry and Wet Atmospheres. ISIJ International, 43(12), 1983–1988. https://doi.org/10.2355/isijinternational.43.1983
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