Quenching: Brine and Caustic

  • Lozano D
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Abstract

The addition of salts (brine) and caustic soda (NaOH) to water is employed to increase its cooling capacity.Small additions of salts decrease the vapor film duration (inherent of water quenching), and at optimalconcentrations, it might be eliminated. The vapor film stage is not desirable on steel quenching due to thelow heat transfer and nonuniform cooling that leads to distortion and cracking, mainly because of the uneventhermal and transformational stresses generated through the quenched part. These aqueous solutions canincrease the heat transfer coefficient from two to five times while promoting a more uniform cooling and arecommonly employed when low-hardenability steels are quenched. For interrupted quenching where highcooling rates are required to produce a shell–core-type microstructure, these solutions could also be used.The effect of various aqueous solutions (NaCl, NaOH, LiCl, KCl, NaNO2, NaNO3, CaCl2, NaSO4, andMgSO4) on the heat transfer mechanisms as well as on the heat flux during quenching is reviewed.

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Lozano, D. (2016). Quenching: Brine and Caustic. In Encyclopedia of Iron, Steel, and Their Alloys (pp. 2824–2833). CRC Press. https://doi.org/10.1081/e-eisa-120048777

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