Metallographic Examination of Gears: Principles, Methods and Key Knowledge
Time : 2025-11-13
Gears are core components of mechanical transmission, and their material properties and heat treatment quality directly affect service life and reliability. Metallographic examination, through microscopic analysis of gear materials, evaluates key indicators such as heat treatment processes, case hardening depth and grain size, serving as a crucial quality control method.
The primary goal of gear metallographic examination is to ensure product performance by assessing critical parameters:
- Case hardening depth: A key indicator for wear resistance of carburized/quenched gears (as required by ISO 6336 standard).
- Grain size: Influences gear strength and toughness (graded per ASTM E112).
- Microstructure: Morphologies of martensite, retained austenite and carbides determine fatigue performance.
- Surface defects: Detects grinding burns and cracks (compliant with AIAG CQI-9 standard).
- Ferrite (α): Body-centered cubic (BCC) structure, soft and tough with low hardness (~80HV), common in low-carbon steel and pure iron.
- Austenite (γ): Face-centered cubic (FCC) structure, high plasticity and non-magnetic, present in high-temperature or high-alloy steel like 304 stainless steel and high-manganese steel.
- Cementite (Fe₃C): Orthorhombic crystal system, hard and brittle (~800HV) and enhances wear resistance, found in white cast iron and high-carbon steel.
- Martensite: Body-centered tetragonal (BCT) structure, high hardness (500~1000HV) obtained through quenching, used in quenched steel and tool steel.
- Sampling positions: Tooth top (evaluates surface hardening effect), tooth root (analyzes microstructure in stress concentration areas), cross-section (measures case hardening gradient).
- Key preparation steps: Cutting → Mounting → Grinding → Polishing → Etching → Microscopic observation.
- Mounting: Use epoxy resin for edge protection (cold mounting recommended to avoid thermal impact).
- Polishing: Polish to 0.05μm mirror finish with diamond polishing paste to prevent scratch interference.
- Application: Basic microstructure observation (e.g., grain size grading).
- Configuration requirements: 500×~1000× magnification, equipped with image analysis software (e.g., Olympus Stream).
- Advantages: High-resolution observation of non-metallic inclusions (e.g., MnS) and composition analysis via EDS.
- Case example: Intergranular cracks caused by sulfur segregation detected in wind power gearbox fracture analysis.
- Method: Vickers hardness (HV0.3~HV1) gradient testing to plot case hardening curves.
- Standard: ISO 2639 defines case hardening depth as the distance from surface to substrate at 550HV1.
- Excessive carburization: Network carbides on surface, increasing brittleness and risk of tooth surface spalling.
- Grinding burn: Temper colors revealed by pickling (ASTM E1257), prevented by controlling feed rate and using CBN grinding wheels.
- Quenching cracks: Intergranular propagation with sharp ends (confirmed by SEM).