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Article

Compound Boronizing and Its Kinetics Analysis for H13 Steel with Rare Earth CeO2 and Cr2O3

1
Hubei Provincial Key Laboratory of Digital Textile Equipment, Wuhan Textile University, Wuhan 430073, China
2
Department of Special Technology, Polzunov Altai State Technical University, 656038 Barnaul, Russia
3
Department of Mechanical Engineering, East-Siberian State University of Technology and Management, 670013 Ulan-Ude, Russia
4
Zhejiang Xinchang Sanxiong Bearing Co., Ltd., Shaoxing 312500, China
*
Authors to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Appl. Sci. 2022, 12(7), 3636; https://doi.org/10.3390/app12073636
Submission received: 26 February 2022 / Revised: 16 March 2022 / Accepted: 24 March 2022 / Published: 3 April 2022
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Selected Papers from MMSE 2021)

Abstract

:
The compound boronizing of H13 steel sample was carried out by adding rare earth CeO2, and the effects of main parameters of compound boronizing on the properties of the boronizing layer were investigated. The boronizing kinetics were also analyzed. Under the conditions of boronizing temperatures of 850 °C, 900 °C, 950 °C, and 1000 °C, and boronizing times of 2 h, 3 h, 4 h, and 5 h, the boronizing experiment was carried out by adding CeO2 with mass fraction of 2%, 4% and 6%, Cr2O3 with a mass fraction of 1%, 2%, 3%, and 4%. The results show that boronizing H13 steel with rare earth CeO2 is conducive to the diffusion of boron atoms and can significantly improve the thickness and microhardness of boronizing layer. Boronizing kinetic analysis shows that the diffusion activation energy of boron atom decreases significantly when the rare earth content is 4%, which indicates that the content of rare earth CeO2 with 4% is an ideal selection for considering improving the utilization rate of rare earth materials, and the boronizing kinetic analysis can provide a quantitative basis for determining the content of rare earth metals. Therefore, experiments and analysis show that for H13 steel, when the boronizing temperature is 950 °C, time is 4 h and rare earth content is 4%, the thickness of the boronizing layer can reach 71 μm and the microhardness at the depth of 70 μm from the surface layer can reach 1546.32 HV. Moreover, on this basis, when Cr2O3 with a rare earth content of 2% is added, the microstructure and wear resistance of the boronizing layer are significantly improved.

1. Introduction

Boronization is a widely used thermochemical surface treatment technology to improve the friction and wear properties of metal materials. It can increase the hardness, up to 1400–2000 HV, of metal surfaces and enhance the corrosion resistance of metal surfaces, so it is more advantageous than carburizing and nitriding [1,2,3]. H13 steel is an air-cooling hardening hot working die steel with good strength and toughness. It is one of the most widely used in the manufacture of hot extrusion die, mandrel, hot forging die, and aluminum, copper, and its alloy die casting die. Its composition is shown in Table 1. In order to improve the surface properties of H13, quenching, tempering, ion nitriding, and other methods are generally used, but the effect of these conventional treatments often cannot meet higher and higher application requirements. Boronizing the parts of this material can improve its surface hardness and wear resistance so as to improve the service life of the die [4,5,6]. During the boronizing process, the structure and properties of the boronizing layer can be significantly improved by adding different elements such as rare earth, Cr, and Al for composite boronizing treatment. It has been found that the addition of rare earth can improve the microstructure and properties of boronizing layer and increase the boronizing rate [7,8,9].
To understand the boronizing kinetics is of scientific and industrial importance (for example, [9,10]). It is found that the addition of rare earth in the boronizing process can reduce the diffusion activation energy required by boron atoms during boronizing, so as to improve the effect of boronizing layer and improve boronizing efficiency. Since the radius of a rare earth atom is larger than that of an iron atom, the γ-Fe lattice is deformed and crystal defects are increased, which provides a channel for the diffusion of active boron atoms into the material and accelerates the diffusion speed of active boron atoms into the material, so as to reduce the diffusion activation energy of active boron atoms. For example, in [11,12], the addition of rare earth Nd2O3 (5%) reduced the diffusion activation energy from 184 kJ/mol to 122 kJ/mol in 45 steel and from 261 kJ/mol to 155 kJ/mol in T12 steel, which reduced the diffusion activation energy by 34% and 41% respectively, and significantly improved the boronizing efficiency. Therefore, boronizing kinetic analysis for different steel materials is a very valuable method to reveal the boronizing process.
Rare earth additives used for boronizing mainly include CeO2, La2O3, Nd2O3, etc. Among them, CeO2 has higher oxidation and strong adsorption performance and is easy to prepare. Therefore, CeO2 is a valuable boronizing additive, which can effectively improve the microstructure of boronizing layer. Its application in boronizing with 5% rare earth(CeO2) of high entropy alloy AlCoCuFeMnNi can make the alloy hardness change in gradient between 260–420 HV0.2 and stabilize at about 400 HV0.2 [13,14,15]. For titanium alloy TC21, after boronizing with rare earth CeO2, the wear rate of boronizing sample is 50–60 times lower than that of non boronizing sample [14,16]. In addition, adding metal elements such as aluminum (Al) and chromium (Cr2O3) during boronizing is conducive to further improve the microstructure of boronizing layer and reduce the brittleness of boronizing layer [17].
In this paper, compound boronizing with rare earth CeO2 and chromium(Cr2O3) for H13 steel is studied, and the effects of different proportions of rare earth CeO2 in boronizing agent on the diffusion activation energy of H13 steel and the properties of boronizing layer are analyzed in order to provide a basis for further improving the properties of H13 steel.

2. Experiment

2.1. Material

The main material is H13 die steel, and its material composition is shown in Table 1.
The H13 mold steel was cut into 20 mm × 10 mm × 10 mm rectangular parallelepipeds as boronizing samples. The hardness of the H13 mold steel without boronization was 450 HV-550 HV, and the experimental boronizing paste was B4C, KBF4, C, bentonite, Cr2O3, CeO2, H2O, etc.

2.2. Experiment

Material treatment. Firstly, the samples shall be treated on the water mill with 180 mesh, 360 mesh, 600 mesh, and 1000 mesh sandpaper respectively, and the rust and scratches on the material surface shall be cleaned, then cleaned with alcohol and put into the drying dish for standby.
The experimental parameters are shown in Table 2. The boronizing time, temperature, and rare earth content have important effects on the boronizing results, which are the key factors investigated in this experiment.
Preparation of boronizing agent. Mix the medicine required by the boronizing agent into the mortar according to the ratio, crush the medicine, and stir it uniformly. A series of boronizing agents were prepared by adding 2%, 4%, and 6% rare earth CeO2, respectively, and 2%, 3%, 4%, and 6% Cr2O3, respectively.
Compound boronizing experiment. The preparation and boronizing experiment of boronizing agent shall be carried out according to the designed test scheme.
The slurry boronizing agent is uniformly adhered to the sample surface with a thickness of 3–5 mm, and then placed in a dry and ventilated environment for 12–14 h. Then it is placed into the drying oven for preheating and drying, the temperature is set to 200 °C and the time is set to 2–3 h. Take out the sample after drying and preheating and put it into the high-temperature heating furnace for boronizing. The boronizing time is 2 h, 3 h, 4 h and 5 h, and the boronizing temperature is 850 °C, 900 °C, 950 °C and 1000 °C, respectively.
Performance test. After boronizing, the sample is taken out of the furnace for air cooling, the boronizing agent shell on the surface is removed after cooling the sample, and cut from the middle with a wire cutting machine, and one should grind, polish and corrode the cutting surface with different types of sandpaper again. The corrosion solution is 3–5% nitric acid alcohol solution [14,15]. Then, the microstructure observation, test of thickness, microhardness and wear resistance for the infiltrated layer are carried out.
The instruments are: optical microscope Olympus (DSX-HRUF), microhardness tester (HV 1000) and wear tester (MMS-2A-2). When testing the boronizing layer thickness, take 10 points to measure the thickness and calculate the average value as the measured value of boronizing layer thickness.

3. Results and Analysis

3.1. Thickness and Hardness of Boronizing Layer without Rare Earth

Table 3 shows the thickness of boronizing layer obtained in experiment for H13 steel under different temperature and time process conditions without adding rare earth (take the average value of 10 points, Hardness value of boronizing layer measured at 40 μm from the surface of boronizing layer). It can be seen from Table 3 and Table 4 that when the boronizing temperature is 950 °C and the boronizing time is 4 h, the boronizing layer thickness is the largest (42 μm).
The hardness at 40 μm from the surface of the boronizing layer still reaches 1246.90 HV. Therefore, it is concluded that the ideal basic process parameters for boronizing H13 steel are: the boronizing temperature is 950 °C and the boronizing time is 4 h. This can provide a reference for further boriding experiments with rare earth.

3.2. Thickness and Microhardness of Boronizing Layer with Rare Earth Addition

In order to investigate the process of rare earth boronizing and analyze the boronizing kinetics, Table 5 lists the thickness of boronizing layer under different rare earth content and temperature when rare earth CeO2 is added to boronizing agent and boronizing time is 4 h. Figure 1 is the variation curve of different rare earth content, boronizing temperature and boronizing layer thickness with a boronizing time of 4 h.
From the comparison between Table 3 and Table 5, it is easy to find that the boronizing layer thickness increases greatly with the addition of rare earth CeO2. For example, when the boronizing temperature is 950 °C and the boronizing time is 4 h, the thickness of the boronizing layer increases from 42 μm when rare earth is not added to 71 μm when rare earth is 4%.
It can be seen from Table 5 and Figure 1 that the boronizing layer thickness increases gradually with the increase of temperature, and at the same temperature, and at the same temperature, with the increase of the content of rare earth CeO2, the thickness of the boronizing layer also shows an increasing trend. This shows that the increase of rare earth content can promote the infiltration of boron atoms into the bulk material and increase the thickness of boronizing layer [18].
For example, when the boronizing temperature is 950 °C (1223 K), when the rare earth content increases from 2% to 4%, the boronizing layer thickness increases significantly from 54 μm to 71 μm (up to 31.5%).
However, when the rare earth content increases from 4% to 6%, the increase of infiltration layer thickness is not obvious (From 71 μm to 74 μm, the increase is only 4.2%). This phenomenon will be explained by the boronizing kinetic analysis below.
Table 6 shows the microhardness of the boronizing layer with different rare earth CeO2 content (2%, 4% and 6%) at the boronizing temperature of 950 °C and boronizing time of 4 h. Figure 2 shows the microhardness curve of the boronizing layer. It can be seen from Table 6 and Figure 2 that the microhardness of each group when the content of rare earth CeO2 is 4% is greater than that when the content is 2% and 6%.
When the content of rare earth is 4%, the hardness at 70 μm from the surface layer reaches 1546.32 HV, which is significantly higher than that at the same depth when the content is 2% and 6% (662.47 HV and 1125.45 HV, respectively). At the same time, when the rare earth content is 4%, there is little difference in hardness from the surface to 70 μm away from the surface of the boronizing layer. This shows that when the content of rare earth CeO2 is 4%, the hardness of boronizing layer is high and relatively stable [18].
The analysis of the above results preliminarily shows that when adding rare earth CeO2 for boronizing, the ideal boronizing layer thickness and microhardness can be obtained when the boronizing temperature is 950 °C, the boronizing time is 4 h, and the rare earth content is 4%.

3.3. Boronization Kinetics Analysis

According to the Arrhenius equation, the relationship between the penetration time, the thickness of the penetration layer, and the growth coefficient can be written as the following Equation (1) [16].
X 2 = G t
where X is the thickness of the boronizing layer (μm), G is the growth coefficient (m2·s), and t is the boronization time (s).
From the Arrhenius equation can get Equation (2) [16], where T is the absolute temperature (K), Q is the diffusion activation energy (J mol), R is the gas constant (J·(mol·k)−1), and G0 is the diffusion constant (m2·s),
ln G = ln G 0 Q R 1 T
From Equations (1) and (2), the growth coefficient and diffusion activation energy at different rare earth can be obtained as shown in Table 7, The growth coefficients under different rare earth CeO2 contents can be obtained from Equations (1) and (2), as shown in Table 7. The relation curve of diffusion activation energy LnG and 1/T is shown in Figure 3, where K represents the absolute temperature (K1123 = 850 °C, K1173 = 900 °C, K1223 = 950 °C, K1273 = 1000 °C).
It can be seen from Figure 3 that the linear slope at 2% of rare earth content is greater than 4%, and the slope at 4% is almost parallel to that at 6%, indicating that the diffusion activation energy of boron atom changes when the rare earth content increases from 2% to 4%, while there is basically no change from 4% to 6%. Table 8 shows the activation energy of different contents of rare earth CeO2, 160.70 kJ/mol at 2%, 143.94 kJ/mol at 4% and 143.16 kJ/mol at 6%. It can be found from Table 7 that when the content of rare earth CeO2 increases from 2% to 4%, the diffusion activation energy decreases by 16.76 kJ/mol (relative decrease of 10.4%), and when the content of rare earth CeO2 increases from 4% to 6%, the diffusion activation energy only decreases by 0.78 kJ/mol (relative decrease of 0.54%), which is not obvious [18].
It shows that when rare earth CeO2 increases from 4% to 6%, the effect of further promoting boron atom diffusion is very small, so the increase of infiltration layer thickness is also very small. This also shows that the utilization rate of rare earth decreases significantly when the content of rare earth is further increased.
Therefore, this theoretically shows that the content of rare earth CeO2 of 4% is an ideal proportion.

3.4. Microstructure of Rare Earth Boron-Chromium Co-Infiltration

In our previous studies, it was found that when the CeO2 rare earth content was 4%, the boronizing layer had better combination and performance [18]. Now, we studied the effect of different Cr2O3 content on rare earth boron-chromium co-infiltration. Figure 4 shows the microstructure of boronizing layer with Cr2O3 content of 1%, 2%, 3%and 4% respectively at boronizing temperature of 950 °C, time of 4 h, and rare earth content of 4%. As can be seen from Figure 4, with the increase of Cr2O3 content, the microstructure of boronizing layer is gradually changing. When the content is 1%, the microstructure of boronizing layer is relatively sparse, and a large number of holes appear in boronizing layer. At 2%, the boronizing microstructure is compact and there are few holes; at 3%, 4%, the microstructure of boronizing layer shows a few holes. This shows that too much chromium oxide (Cr2O3) is added to the boronizing agent, which may cause chromium atoms to accumulate on the surface of the boronizing layer, thereby inhibiting the growth of the boronizing layer and reducing the thickness of the boronizing layer. The experiment also shows that the boronizing layer has better microstructure when the content of Cr2O3 is 2%.
Figure 5 shows the structure of the rare-earth boron-chromium co-diffusion layer at different temperatures when boronizing time is 4 h, rare earth CeO2 content is 4% and Cr2O3 content is 2%. The figure shows that as the boronizing temperature increases from 850 °C to 950 °C, the boronizing layer structure becomes continuous and compact, However, when the boronizing temperature increased from 950 °C to 1000 °C, holes began to appear in the structure of the boronizing layer. When the boronizing temperature exceeded 980 °C, holes appeared in the outermost layer of the boronizing layer. This is due to the fact that the temperature rises too high, accelerates the diffusion of boron atoms, and it is difficult for boron atoms to form a continuous boronizing layer with the surface Fe atoms. The increase in temperature also causes more gas to escape from the infiltrated layer, resulting in holes and sparseness on the surface of the boronizing layer. The results show that the boronizing temperature of 950 °C is a reasonable boronizing temperature for the rare-earth boron-chromium co-diffusion.

3.5. Wear Resistance Test of Boronizing Layer

Table 9 shows the mass loss of the boronizing samples in friction and wear test for the three cases (single boronizing, rare earth boronizing, rare earth boron-chromium co-boriding). Test force: 100 N, rotating speed: 200 r/min, test time: 60 min, record the sample mass loss data every 10 min. It can also be seen from Table 8 that the mass loss of the single boronizing sample is the largest, and that of the rare earth boron-chromium co-boriding is the smallest.
Among them, in the 60 min wear time, the mass loss of single boronizing is 22.3 mg, that of rare earth boronizing is 9.2 mg, and that of rare earth boron-chromium co-infiltration is 6.1 mg. Among them, the mass loss of single boronization is 3.7 times that of boron-chromium rare earth co-infiltration, and 2.4 times that of rare earth boronization, which shows that the wear resistance of rare earth boron-chromium co-infiltration is relatively better. This is due to the fact that the addition of rare earth increases the activity of boron atoms, which provides a channel for the active boron atoms to diffuse into the material, thereby improving the boronizing efficiency. And at the same time, Cr2O3 strengthens the metal bonds in the local area of the B-B atomic bond, which improves the quality of the boronizing layer. is improved, thereby improving the wear resistance of the boronizing layer.

4. Conclusions

This paper shows that the compound boronizing of H13 steel with rare earth CeO2 is conducive to the diffusion of boron atoms, and can significantly improve the thickness, microhardness, microstructure and wear resistance of boronizing layer. For example, when the boronizing temperature is 950 °C and the boronizing time is 4 h, the thickness of the boronizing layer increases from 42 μm to 71 μm. The microhardness at the depth of 70 μm from the surface layer can reach 1546.32 HV. This shows that not only the thickness of the boronizing layer is increased, but also the hardness consistency in the boronizing layer is good, which can effectively improve the surface properties and service life of the boronizing layer.
The kinetic analysis of rare earth boronizing of H13 steel shows that when the content of rare earth CeO2 increases from 2% to 4%, the diffusion activation energy decreases by 16.76 kJ/mol (relative decrease of 10.4%), and when the content increases from 4% to 6%, the diffusion activation energy changes very little, only 0.54%. Boronizing kinetic analysis can provide quantitative basis for determining the content of rare earth. The study shows that adding 2% Cr2O3 can obtain better microstructure and wear resistance, since rare earth and Cr2O3 can provide more diffusion channels and strengthen the B-B atomic bond. The research methods and results of this paper can provide reference for rare earth boron-chromium co-infiltration process of carbon steel. Therefore, in order to improve the utilization rate of rare earth and Cr2O3 materials, the content of rare earth CeO2 of 4% and Cr2O3 of 2% is an ideal proportion. The theoretical analysis and experimental results show that the boronizing kinetic analysis can provide a quantitative basis for determining the content of rare earth. The research methods and results of this paper can provide reference for rare earth boron-chromium co-infiltration process of carbon steel.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, S.M., Y.Z., B.L. and A.G.; methodology, S.M., Y.Z. and Q.Z.; software, Y.Z., Q.Z. and Y.F.; validation, S.M., Y.Z.; formal analysis, Y.Z., Q.Z. and Y.F.; investigation, Q.Z., Y.F.; resources, S.M.; data curation, Y.Z., Y.F.; writing—original draft preparation, Y.Z., S.M.; writing—review and editing, S.M., Y.Z.; visualization, S.M., Y.Z.; supervision, S.M.; project administration, S.M.; funding acquisition, S.M. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This work was supported by The Science and Technology Program of Hubei Province (No.2019AEE011, 2018AAA036) and The National Science Foundation of China of China (No.51175385).

Institutional Review Board Statement

The study did not involve humans or animals.

Informed Consent Statement

The study did not involve humans.

Data Availability Statement

Data is contained within the article.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest. The funders had no role in the design of the study; in the collection, analyses, or interpretation of data; in the writing of the manuscript, or in the decision to publish the results.

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Figure 1. The increase of thickness of boronizing layer with solution and temperature (4 h).
Figure 1. The increase of thickness of boronizing layer with solution and temperature (4 h).
Applsci 12 03636 g001
Figure 2. Hardness curves of different rare earth CeO2 contents.
Figure 2. Hardness curves of different rare earth CeO2 contents.
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Figure 3. Relationship between Ln G and 1 / T under different rare earth contents (straight line).
Figure 3. Relationship between Ln G and 1 / T under different rare earth contents (straight line).
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Figure 4. Microstructure of boronizing layer with Cr2O3 content of 1%, 2%, 3%, and 4%, respectively. (a) 1% Cr2O3; (b) 2% Cr2O3; (c) 3% Cr2O3; and (d) 4% Cr2O3.
Figure 4. Microstructure of boronizing layer with Cr2O3 content of 1%, 2%, 3%, and 4%, respectively. (a) 1% Cr2O3; (b) 2% Cr2O3; (c) 3% Cr2O3; and (d) 4% Cr2O3.
Applsci 12 03636 g004
Figure 5. Microstructure of boronizing layer at different boronizing temperatures (boronizing time 4 h, rare earth content 4%, Cr2O3 content 2%). (a) 850 °C; (b) 900 °C; (c) 950 °C; and (d) 1000 °C.
Figure 5. Microstructure of boronizing layer at different boronizing temperatures (boronizing time 4 h, rare earth content 4%, Cr2O3 content 2%). (a) 850 °C; (b) 900 °C; (c) 950 °C; and (d) 1000 °C.
Applsci 12 03636 g005
Table 1. Composition of H13 mold steel.
Table 1. Composition of H13 mold steel.
ElementCSiMnCrMoVPS
Content
(%)
0.32–0.450.80–1.200.20–0.504.75–5.501.10–1.750.80–1.20≤0.030≤0.030
Table 2. Experimental parameters.
Table 2. Experimental parameters.
Paste materialB4C, KBF4, C, Bentonite, CeO2, Cr2O3, H2O, etc.
Paste thickness3–5 mm
Pre-treatmentVentilated environment, 12–14 h
Pre-heatingIn the drying oven, 200 °C, 2–3 h
Boriding temperature850 °C, 900 °C, 950 °C, 1000 °C, respectively
Boriding time2 h, 3 h, 4 h, 5 h, respectively
CeO2 content0%, 2%, 4%, 6%, respectively
Cr2O3 content1%, 2%, 3%, 4%, respectively
Table 3. Boronizing layer thickness at different temperature and time.
Table 3. Boronizing layer thickness at different temperature and time.
Time850 °C900 °C950 °C1000 °C
Temperature
2 h16 μm23 μm27 μm28 μm
3 h19 μm27 μm32 μm31 μm
4 h20 μm36 μm42 μm42 μm
5 h21 μm35 μm40 μm41 μm
Table 4. Hardness of penetration layer at different temperature and time (40 μm from the surface of the infiltration layer).
Table 4. Hardness of penetration layer at different temperature and time (40 μm from the surface of the infiltration layer).
Temperature850 °C900 °C950 °C1000 °C
Time
2 h623.46 HV635.12 HV646.06 HV665.32 HV
3 h612.45 HV626.09 HV723.47 HV684.16 HV
4 h604.78 HV678.32 HV1246.90 HV1133.42 HV
5 h632.60 HV667.06 HV1136.05 HV1068.30 HV
Table 5. Thickness of infiltration layer at different temperatures (Boronizing time 4 h).
Table 5. Thickness of infiltration layer at different temperatures (Boronizing time 4 h).
TemperatureCeO2 (2%)CeO2 (4%)CeO2 (6%)
Content
1123 K (850 °C)22 μm31 μm33 μm
1173 K (900 °C)42 μm57 μm58 μm
1223 K (950 °C)54 μm71 μm74 μm
1273 K (1000 °C)59 μm75 μm79 μm
Table 6. Boronizing layer hardness (boronizing temp. 950 °C, time 4 h).
Table 6. Boronizing layer hardness (boronizing temp. 950 °C, time 4 h).
Surface Depth(CeO2) 2% Hardness/HV(CeO2) 4% Hardness/HV(CeO2) 6% Hardness/HV
20 μm1559.931571.971411.97
40 μm1412.101529.931509.04
60 μm714.291670.021173.15
70 μm662.471546.321125.45
100 μm686.60652.42624.31
Table 7. Growth factors at different rare earth (CeO2) contents.
Table 7. Growth factors at different rare earth (CeO2) contents.
ConditionGrowth Factor (m2·s)
2% CeO2K1123 = 3.36 × 10−14K1173 = 1.23 × 10−13K1223 = 2.03 × 10−13K1273 = 2.42 × 10−13
4% CeO2K1123 = 6.67 × 10−14K1173 = 2.26 × 10−13K1223 = 3.5 × 10−13K1273 = 3.91 × 10−13
6% CeO2K1123 = 7.56 × 10−14K1173 = 2.34 × 10−13K1223 = 3.8 × 10−13K1273 = 4.33 × 10−13
Table 8. Reduction of activation energy with different contents of rare earth CeO2.
Table 8. Reduction of activation energy with different contents of rare earth CeO2.
CeO2 2%CeO2 4%CeO2 6%
Diffusion activation energy (kJ/mol)160.70143.94143.16
Relatively reduced diffusion activation energy (kJ/mol)Contrast value16.760.78
Table 9. Mass loss of boronizing samples for the three cases.
Table 9. Mass loss of boronizing samples for the three cases.
Wear Time/minMass Loss of Single Boronizing Sample/mgMass Loss of Boronizing Sample with Rare Earth Content of 4%/mgMass Loss of Boronizing Sample with Chromium Oxide Content of 2% and Rare Earth of 4%/mg
104.81.20.8
206.62.51.7
309.23.82.7
4012.15.13.6
5016.76.94.8
6022.39.26.1
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Mei, S.; Zhang, Y.; Zheng, Q.; Fan, Y.; Lygdenov, B.; Guryev, A. Compound Boronizing and Its Kinetics Analysis for H13 Steel with Rare Earth CeO2 and Cr2O3. Appl. Sci. 2022, 12, 3636. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12073636

AMA Style

Mei S, Zhang Y, Zheng Q, Fan Y, Lygdenov B, Guryev A. Compound Boronizing and Its Kinetics Analysis for H13 Steel with Rare Earth CeO2 and Cr2O3. Applied Sciences. 2022; 12(7):3636. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12073636

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Mei, Shunqi, Yanwei Zhang, Quan Zheng, Yu Fan, Burial Lygdenov, and Alexey Guryev. 2022. "Compound Boronizing and Its Kinetics Analysis for H13 Steel with Rare Earth CeO2 and Cr2O3" Applied Sciences 12, no. 7: 3636. https://doi.org/10.3390/app12073636

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