[Surface treatment] heat treatment
Since today's requirements for metal materials are more comprehensive, if you want to improve the strength and hardness of metal, you need to use "heat treatment" to achieve it.
The so-called "heat treatment" is to heat the metal material to a specified temperature, maintain the specified temperature for a certain period of time, and then lower the temperature to normal temperature or low temperature at a certain rate according to the required metal properties, changing the metal structure through changes in temperature. This leads to better materials.
Generally, the heat treatment methods we often hear include normalizing, annealing, quenching, tempering and surface hardening.
About heat treatment methods
Normalising
Annealing
Quenching
Tempering
Tempering is to heat the quenched steel to an appropriate temperature below the austenite transformation temperature, maintain high temperature heating for 1 to 2 hours and then cool. The structure of tempered steel tends to be stable, its brittleness is reduced, and its toughness and plasticity are improved. Tempering and quenching are closely connected processes and are the last process of heat treatment. They can eliminate or reduce quenching stress, stabilize the shape and size of steel, and prevent deformation and cracking of quenched parts. High temperature tempering can also improve cutting performance.
Tempering is further subdivided into low temperature tempering, medium temperature tempering and high temperature tempering.