Abstract
In this work the behaviour of hard coated light-metal components was investigated when they are mechanically loaded. Three light-metal alloys, Ti-6A1-4V, AlSi7Mg and AlMgSiO.5 and 100Cr6 steel (as a reference material) were coated by two different physical vapour deposition processes: radio frequency magnetron sputtering and electron beam evaporation. The coating materials utilised were CrN and TiN. Standard test methods with different loading conditions were used to evaluate the substrate/coating-combinations: the hardness test (applying a static normal load), the scratch test (applying a combination of a static normal and a static tangential force) and the impact test (applying a dynamic normal load).
It was observed that the load support of coated materials depends on the loading conditions. The coated aluminium alloys showed poor load support under all loading test conditions but produced a higher surface hardness than uncoated steel. Coated Ti-6Al-4V showed very good load support properties, similar to coated steel. All coated light-metal substrates demonstrated significant improvement in load support behaviour with an increase in coating thickness.
The results of the scratch test, which is commonly used to assess adhesion properties of thin coatings, showed an immediate indenter-breakthrough on the aluminium alloy substrates, but causing no coating delamination. Due to this behaviour, the scratch test is not suitable to evaluate adhesion properties on coated soft light-metals. Yet the impact test allowed assessment of coating delamination on the aluminium alloys, proving its usefulness for adhesion measurement even on soft substrates.
The study indicates that substitution of steel with coated light-metal alloys is a viable proposition for certain applications.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 141-152 |
Number of pages | 12 |
Journal | Materialwissenschaft und Werkstofftechnik |
Volume | 29 |
Issue number | 3 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 1 Mar 1998 |