• VACUUM HARDENING
  • FINECARB® VACUUM CARBURIZING
  • PRENITLPC® HIGH-TEMPERATURE VACUUM CARBURISING WITH PRENITRIDING 
  • SUPERSATURATION AND AGING – PRECIPITATION HARDENING 
  • ANNEALING 
  • TEMPERING 
  • VACUUM SOLDERING 

The purpose of hardening is to obtain a hard martensitic or sometimes bainitic structure. It involves austenitization, rapid cooling and tempering. Depending on the type of material, the shape and cross-section of details as well as the usage requirements, we perform vacuum volumetric quenching, with cooling in oil or gases under a high pressure of 15 bar, which ensures lower deformation and, consequently, reduces the grinding allowance.  

The use of FINECARB® technology allows to obtain optimal parameters of the surface layer as a result of the elimination of internal oxidation and uncontrolled, unfavourable precipitation. An additional effect is the reduction of deformation of elements during their heat treatment.  

We offer the implementation of processes in single-chamber vacuum furnaces, in which both the carburizing and hardening processes take place in the same chamber, as well as in two-chamber vacuum furnaces, where the carburizing process is carried out in one chamber, the so-called "Heating chamber", and the hardening process in the second chamber, the so-called "Cooling chamber", connected with a quenching bath.  

Low-pressure carburizing of steel with the FineCarb® technology guarantees the achievement of the assumed thickness of the surface layers in a much shorter time compared to gas carburizing, as well as full control and repeatability of the processes. 

After the carburizing stage, we can quench in vacuum oil or nitrogen under high pressure. 

It is a variant of the low-pressure carburizing process, intended mainly for thicker layers. Thanks to its technological solutions, it allows the process to be carried out at higher temperatures without the phenomenon of grain growth.  

The use of the PreNitLPC® high-temperature technology is justified both in economic and functional terms.  

We implement this technology in single-chamber HPGQ VPT furnaces, in two-chamber furnaces with cooling in quenching oil and in process chambers of modular systems for vacuum carburizing.  


Steels with austenitic structure, as well as other alloys - mainly non-ferrous metals - which do not show allotropic changes but are characterized by variable solubility of one of the components in a solid solution, can be subjected to precipitation hardening.

We offer processes that are combined technological operations:
• supersaturation
• aging

Supersaturation   
It involves heating the alloy to a temperature higher by approx. 30 ÷ 50°C than the limit of solubility in order to dissolve the separated component (in steels, most often tertiary cementite) in a solid solution, heating at this temperature and then cooling rapidly. As a result of supersaturation, the alloy obtains a single-phase structure.

In the case of austenitic steels, the structure is austenite supersaturated with carbon. The strength properties of steel after supersaturation are slightly reduced, but plastic properties increase.


Aging   
It involves heating the previously supersaturated alloy to a temperature below the limit of solubility, heating at this temperature and cooling it down. During the aging process, the excess component in the supersaturated solid solution is released in the form of highly dispersed phases. 

In some cases, the aging involves intermediate phases and Guinier-Preston zones, which are complexes in which they segregate atoms dissolved in the solvent.

Aging causes strengthening, manifested by an increase in strength properties and a decrease in plastic properties.

The aging effect occurs when the temperature is too high, consisting in coagulation of the precipitates and the loss of their coherence, which does not increase the hardness in relation to the supersaturated state, but on the contrary - reduces it. Sometimes aging occurs at room temperature, then it is called spontaneous aging. Aging can also be an undesirable process, e.g., in deep drawing sheets and in boiler steels, as it reduces plastic properties and increases brittleness.

A method of heat treatment of the material, which usually involves heating the steel to a specific temperature, heating it at this temperature and cooling it in order to obtain structures close to the equilibrium state.

A method of heat treatment of the material, which usually involves heating the steel to a specific temperature, heating it at this temperature and cooling it in order to obtain structures close to the equilibrium state.

In the field of annealing, we carry out orders from a wide range of services.

After hardening, all steels show reduced plastic properties and unfavourable stresses.  

In order to eliminate them, a heat treatment procedure is carried out, involving heating the previously hardened material, heating and cooling it in order to obtain the optimal structure and properties.  

We offer low, medium, and high tempering in the temperature range of 180-650°C. It is possible to carry out the processes in the presence of shielding gas, and in the case of highly personalized requirements for the highest purity, the implementation of the vacuum tempering process.  

It is the most modern technology in terms of reliability, cleanliness and durability.

The process of joining materials by means of high temperature soldering in vacuum furnaces, complementing welding techniques, has been developing as an important and stand-alone technology.

Vacuum brazing is a flux-free process, with the removal of air, e.g., in a vacuum, using soldering materials for which the liquidus temperature is above 900°C.