Jump to content
I Forge Iron

Recommended Posts

A man at work was talking about aguy he knows who uses dry ice in his tempering process. I have never heard of this or seen it discussed on here. I did some reading on it last night,it's apparently very effective.
I guess you could call it cold treating.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Well I was hoping someone else had more iinfo. what I got from the article last night was tools steel will have have an increase of 50% wearabilty. You keep the steel at subfreezing temps for up to 24 hours which does something to the grain structure, and then slowly bring back up to 300 f to aneal.
I'll try and find the link today it's pretty interesting.
I by no means know what I'm talking about.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some steels (air hardening) can gain hardness from cryo treating. The super cool temps transform the remaining austentite into matensite. At least that's what I've read. Most heat treaters use liquid nitrogen, I did recently run across a book where a maker used dry ice in this process. One maker of L-6 recomended this process, I haven't tried it yet. It would be a good experiment though.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

All of my stainless baldes are cryogenically treated. They are taken to -300f for a set time. You may wish to research the tepereature you can obtain from dry ice, and the length of time to hold it at temp. Also you may wish to find where in the heat treat cycle this needs to be done.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Dry ice sublimnates at -78C or -109F, liquid nitrogen is -196C or -321F. There is a considerable difference in cold here. Something else to consider is how cold do you need to achieve. There are specifications for cryogenic treatments, and if you do not take the material cold enough for its chemistry the desired results will not be achieved.

Phil

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Mf (the temperature at which all retained austenite is converted to martensite is about -100F for most (all?)
of the knife steels that need this treatment. Thus dry ice should be just barely cold enough for that.
However, liquid nitrogen is more economical for makers that do this frequently because you can keep
a dewar of it for a month or so.

There may be some added benefits to the lower temps of liquid nitrogen but that is more controversial.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Another effect of cryogenic treatment or so I heard is it breaks the crystal boundries in metals reducing it's susceptibility to stress and work hardening. If dry ice is cold enough it might be a lot better for the home shop as it's much safer.

Frosty the Lucky.

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Another effect of cryogenic treatment or so I heard is it breaks the crystal boundries in metals reducing it's susceptibility to stress and work hardening. If dry ice is cold enough it might be a lot better for the home shop as it's much safer.

Frosty the Lucky.


Honestly, I think both products have similar safety requirements. I have used both for shrink fits, and lab work. They both are air/oxygen displacing materials as they evaporate, protection against extreme cold is required, in addition to regular PPE.

One is liquid, while the other is solid.

Phil
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Honestly, I think both products have similar safety requirements. I have used both for shrink fits, and lab work. They both are air/oxygen displacing materials as they evaporate, protection against extreme cold is required, in addition to regular PPE.

One is liquid, while the other is solid.

Phil


It's the liquid and -300f that's the increased safety hazard. I've picked dry ice up with bare hands without ill effect, not for long. Dry ice doesn't boil either, it sublimes so there's no danger of it splashing or spattering. Air replacement is a hazard though a little less with ni.

Either or are well worth knowing what you're doing if you're going to handle it.

Frosty The Lucky.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

since the question was about dry ice in tempering, . I use dry ice and acitone for cryo, to force the conversion of retained austinite, for some of my steels also. but thats not tempering. Hard to get correct answers if mis using tech terms. So I asked what he was talking about. He is honest tho, at least he knows he dont :D

Link to comment
Share on other sites


since the question was about dry ice in tempering, . I use dry ice and acitone for cryo, to force the conversion of retained austinite, for some of my steels also. but thats not tempering. Hard to get correct answers if mis using tech terms. So I asked what he was talking about. He is honest tho, at least he knows he dont :D

Dry ice is what a co-workers friend used in "cold" treating his blades, which sparked my interest. I found this this website http://www.nitrofreeze.com/toolsteels.html
In the article it is described as a cryogenic tempering process.
Which terms being miss used? "tempering" I thought had to do with temperature, is it heat specific?
Link to comment
Share on other sites

The link above to cryogenic heat treating, may or may not be correct. I don't know enough about it, but considering how poor Mister Lasky's interpretation of the history of iron and steel is I' d have a tendency to take much of what he says with a grain of salt. :ph34r:

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Dry ice is what a co-workers friend used in "cold" treating his blades, which sparked my interest. I found this this website http://www.nitrofree...toolsteels.html
In the article it is described as a cryogenic tempering process.
Which terms being miss used? "tempering" I thought had to do with temperature, is it heat specific?


Tempering is a controlled softening of steel from it's full hard state. It lessens brittleness and increases toughness, flexibility, resilience, etc. Actually tempering refers to making a material more durable, flexible, etc. than hard as glass and ceramics can be tempered. Annealing softens steel or non-ferrous metals to it's softest state. Normalizing softens metals to near full soft but is used mostly to remove work hardening and stresses during forming.

Frosty The Lucky.
Link to comment
Share on other sites


Dry ice is what a co-workers friend used in "cold" treating his blades, which sparked my interest. I found this this website http://www.nitrofree...toolsteels.html
In the article it is described as a cryogenic tempering process.
Which terms being miss used? "tempering" I thought had to do with temperature, is it heat specific?

You must temper the steel after your hardening process Before cryo treating, then temper again. The cryo treat in my experience does several things: it will relieve a little stress, raise the Rockwell hardness# by 1 or 2 points therefore requiring retempering, and refine the internal grain structure of the steel.
This process is not required though and I have heard some outlandish claims as to its effectiveness, but on most "stainless" and air hardening steels it helps a lot. Just my :2cents:
Link to comment
Share on other sites

"Tempering" is a very very old word recently re-defined to a tighter meaning.

The original meaning was simply and vaguely "heat treating." About a century ago (give or take) the term "temper" was also used to refer to carbon content.

Nowadays "temper" means "a subcritical heat treatment to improve the toughness of martensitic microstructures by the formation of various distributions of iron and alloy carbides." (Definition paraphrased from George Krauss.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 1 month later...

seen cryo treatment, liquid nitrogen or helium, recommended by Carpenter and Crucible for their "HI TECH" steels, CPM S110V, CPM 3V ,ect...... not the sort of steel we would hand forge. they recommend doing cryo between the first and second temper. Has there been any kind of study as to what cryo treatment would do for more ordinary steel like 1084 or 1095?
scott

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Experiments on plain carbon steels show no more than a point or so Rc improvement - less than the error range on your average Wilson tester. Still worth it for perfectionists or thrillseekers.

The higher alloy steels will see substantial improvement, as they have lower Mf temps and much more retained austenite.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 2 weeks later...

"Tempering" is a very very old word recently re-defined to a tighter meaning.

The original meaning was simply and vaguely "heat treating." About a century ago (give or take) the term "temper" was also used to refer to carbon content.

Nowadays "temper" means "a subcritical heat treatment to improve the toughness of martensitic microstructures by the formation of various distributions of iron and alloy carbides." (Definition paraphrased from George Krauss.)


Temper has its origin in the old english word Temprian, with the meaning "to modify some excessive quality; to restrain within due limits" Temprian comes from the Latin word Temperare, which means "To mix correctly, moderate, regulate, blend"

Sorry. I've just got an arguing problem :P
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 weeks later...

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...