THE EFFECTS OF LOW-ENERGY-NITROGEN-ION IMPLANTATION ON THE TRIBOLOGICAL AND MICROSTRUCTURAL CHARACTERISTICS OF AISI 304 STAINLESS STEEL

1994 
The effects of nitrogen implantation conditions (ion energy, dose rate, and processing time) on the thickness and wear behavior of N-rich layers produced on 304 stainless-steel surfaces are examined. Surfaces implanted at elevated temperatures ( ~400°C) with 0.4 to 2 keV nitrogen ions at high dose rates (1.5 to 3.8 mA/cm) are compared to surfaces implanted at higher energies (30 to 60 keV) and lower current densities (0.1 to 0.25 mA/cm). The most wear-resistant surfaces are observed when the implanted-ion energy is near 1 keV and the dose is very large (>2xl0 ions/cm ) . Typically, surfaces implanted under these optimum conditions exhibit load-bearing capabilities at least 1000 times that of the untreated material. Some comparisons are also made to surfaces processed using conventional plasma-nitriding. Samples treated using either process have wear-resistant surface layers in which the nitrogen is in solid solution in the fee phase. It is argued that the deep N migration ( >l\x,m) that occurs under low-energy implantation conditions is due to thermal diffusion that is enhanced by a mechanism other than radiationinduced vacancy production.
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    25
    References
    58
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []