AGMA 13FTM23-2013 Ductile Iron for Open Gearing C A Current Perspective.pdf
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1、13FTM23 AGMA Technical Paper Ductile Iron for Open Gearing A Current Perspective By F. Wavelet (Ferry Capitain) and M. Pasquier (CMD) 2 13FTM23 Ductile Iron for Open Gearing A Current Perspective Fabrice Wavelet (Ferry Capitain) and Michel Pasquier (CMD) The statements and opinions contained herein
2、are those of the author and should not be construed as an official action or opinion of the American Gear Manufacturers Association. Abstract For over three decades, open gearing for many applications has been successfully designed and manufactured from ductile iron. Examples spanning a full range o
3、f size and transmitted power are in service in various process industries throughout the world, proving the soundness of this material selection in technical as well as economical terms. The latest metallurgical and manufacturing developments have re-established the practical limits for this materia
4、l, well beyond what was considered possible as recently as a few short years ago. A ductile iron gear of 16m diameter, 340 BHN (min.) hardness, module 42, with a face width of 1200 mm and having AGMA Q10 teeth quality, capable of transmitting 2x10 000+ kW was previously a concept. Today, such a gear
5、 can be manufactured. Despite its long and successful service history, ductile iron remains a somewhat lesser known commodity as an open gearing material. The goal of this paper is to present the current “state-of-the-art” with respect to ductile iron as a gear material, including its mechanical pro
6、perties as applicable to gear design, structural characteristics, typical manufacturing and inspection plans, and in-service behavior. For each of these aspects, ductile iron will be compared to other available materials for open gearing design and manufacture, such as cast steel, forged/fabricated
7、steel and austempered ductile iron. Copyright 2013 American Gear Manufacturers Association 1001 N. Fairfax Street, Suite 500 Alexandria, Virginia 22314 September 2013 ISBN: 978-1-61481-080-3 3 13FTM23 Ductile Iron for Open Gearing A Current Perspective Fabrice Wavelet (Ferry Capitain) and Michel Pas
8、quier (CMD) Introduction Gears made for applications in the mining and cement industries cover a wide range in terms of size and transmitted power: from 1 m to 14m, from 500 kW to 17 000 kW (dual pinion drive). To select a material to suit all these different applications is somewhat more complicate
9、d today than perhaps 50 years ago, when cast steel was the only choice available. With a multitude of alternate gear materials (such as cast steel, ductile iron, fabricated steel, austempered ductile iron ADI), comes a more complex choice for the user: “Do all materials have the same strength? How l
10、ong will my gear last? How fast can I get this gear? How much will it cost?” are some of the questions that are raised every time a choice is to be made. While steel is well known as a gearing material, for both its strengths and its weaknesses, ductile iron remains a much lesser-known commodity eve
11、n after several decades of use. The goal of this paper is to present the current “state-of-the-art” with respect to ductile iron as a gear material, including its mechanical properties as applicable to gear design, structural characteristics, typical manufacturing and inspection plans, and in-servic
12、e behavior. For each of these aspects, ductile iron will be compared to other available materials for open gearing design and manufacture, such as cast steel, forged/fabricated steel and austempered ductile iron. Ductile iron - a “new” material While steel has been known for ages, and has been exten
13、sively used in all types of machinery and components, ductile iron was “accidentally” discovered only 60 years ago. It has since experienced an exponentially growing market, and has undergone all kind of testing to be better defined and understood. Figure 1 provides an overview of the mechanical pro
14、perty development of cast irons through the years: tensile strength has exponentially increased with the improvements made in grey, ductile, and ADI. One of the most important achievements over the years has been in the understanding of the chemical composition influence. Figure 2 illustrates the di
15、fference in chemistry between steel and ductile iron. Steel has a low carbon content (between 0.15 and 0.45% for gears), while ductile iron contains approximately 3.4% of carbon. Figure 1. Cast iron, material property development 4 13FTM23 Figure 2. Iron-carbon diagram Ductile iron also contains abo
16、ut 2% silicon (needed to obtain graphite rather than carbides, pushing the “carbon equivalent” to 4.3% as shown on Figure 2) and magnesium (to get nodular graphite instead of flake graphite as in a grey iron). The first consequence of the low carbon content in steel is an extended solidification int
17、erval: solidification starts at a given temperature, and ends 70-100C lower. Because of this difference between the beginning and the end of solidification, steel has a liquid-to-solid volume difference (or “shrink”) of about 2%, which explains the necessity of using risers in steel castings to avoi
18、d porosities. Risers are reservoirs that continue to feed the part with liquid metal during the solidification phase in an attempt to reduce the presence of shrink defects in the last area of solidification. The need to use risers necessarily means that the yield (ratio of finished part weight to li
19、quid metal consumed) is significantly reduced for steel castings. With ductile iron, chemistry is made to meet with the “eutectic point”: at that point (where all the lines merge on Figure 2), theory states that ductile iron is immediately transformed from a liquid to a solid. There is therefore no
20、solidification interval. In practice, this is not exactly the case, but a very narrow solidification interval, combined with graphite expansion, result in a liquid-to-solid volume difference of only 0.1% for ductile iron. As such, there is no need to employ risers in ductile iron castings, with the
21、resultant yield being significantly higher than that of cast steel. Another consequence of the narrow solidification interval is that ductile iron can have a complex casting geometry that is sounder than steel. As an illustrative example, the thickness differences between gussets, the web and the ou
22、ter rim of a steel gear casting will often produce cracks in the connecting areas. The outer rim can easily be 180 mm thick, while the gusset is typically only 50 mm. The gusset solidifies first and contracts, while the outer rim is still hot and expanded; something has to give, and a crack is initi
23、ated. With ductile iron, because every part of the casting solidifies at the same time with a low shrink ratio, these connections are sound. Another example is the size of a radius on the same part made in ductile iron and in steel: a connecting radius of R80 is standard for steel, while it could be
24、 reduced to R50 in ductile iron. This is in relation to the “castability” of a material, i.e., the ability to fill every little part of the mold with sound metal. 5 13FTM23 In addition to its effect on the solidification, carbon content has also a major influence on the structure of the material, as
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