Heat Treatment - Types (Including Annealing), Process and Structures (Principles of Metallurgy)
Heat treatment is one the most important metallurgical process in controlling the properties of metal. In this video we look at the types, process and structures.
Softening heat treatments include annealing and normalizing, and hardening heat treatments include quench and tempering, and age hardening.
00:00 Logo
00:12 Video Overview
00:58 Introduction to Heat Treatment
03:41 Quench and Tempering (Hardening and Tempering)
06:03 Tempering
07:14 Age Hardening (Precipitation Hardening)
08:26 Softening (Conditioning) Heat Treatments
08:46 Annealing and Normalizing
09:34 Pearlite
10:22 Bainite (Upper and Lower)
11:24 Sub-critical (Process) Annealing
12:18 Hardenability
12:38 Introduction to CCT and TTT diagrams
13:19 Time Temperature Transformation (TTT) Diagrams (Including Isothermal Transformation)
14:08 Austempering and Martempering
15:22 Continuous Cooling Transformation (CCT)
17:11 Summary
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#HeatTreatment #Annealing #QuenchAndTempering #Metallurgy
I appreciate the time you have spent on the motion graphics
thank you for the wonderful video, keep up the good work
Pl remove background music
Really Thanks A Looooooooooooooooooooooot for such a simple and focused explanation, and also for dividing the lecture into the time bar.
Thank you for sharing this! Very helpful, keep it up.
again amazing video thanks keep up the good work !!!
Thank you! The way a video should be made for learning, imo.
Incredibly helpful. Thank you so much.
It is incredible ! Like the whole concept is cleared !
Thank you for this, it is appreciated.
Best video so far on you tube
Thank you from Egypt. This is so awesome
so much information 👍
Awesome animation. Keep up the good work.
awesome, very informative and to the point
Thank you for your sharing...Good explanation and very clear
Wow what an explanation , what a presentation Simply Super Thank you
Super
Incredible video, it helped me gain a very good grasp on the field of my project for a material class in Chemical Engineering. Thank you very much!
VERY INTERESTING AND VALUABLE INFROMATION IN THIS HEAT TREATMENT CLIP
Good & informative 👍
Thanks so much for this video !
Great job
What a great video!!!
Thank you. Great work!
Extraordinary video
Thank you for the video
Superb video!! Kindly make video on how to oprate induction furnace and how to calculate scrape and alloying elements weights for making of desired steel.
Thank You!
Thank you! Good job!
You just saved my whole semester, kudos to you. My words can't appreciate enough about the content and the effort you put into it. I will take this for granted, as I had an argument with my welding professor about heat treatment affects on welding productivity and efficiency, he thought that quenching (water) is bad for the welding materials, as he said there are oxygen in water therefore it affects the weld and it makes it bad as it get corrosion, he was assertive that we should use normalize treatment rather quenching. Now, I have come to realize that my professor has got it differently, since according to this video, quenching is way more better in terms of strengthen, so if you don't mind answering me, would you please give me your thoughts on this matter?
incorrect, quenching makes the weld more brittle.
also the higher the strength the more brittle it is.’So a higher carbon metal such as cast iron is stronger but more brittle which is what you don’t want because it’s more prone to cracks. That’s why when a butt joint is welding you let it air cool before the bend test and not quench it.
There is no such thing as better, both have their specific uses and advantages which depend upon your desired properties, and case.
Thanks for the very cogent explanation on what's happening in the annealing process. I hope you can help me with a problem that I can't seem to Google up an answer to. I accidentally left some brass (30% Zinc) for 30 min or so at 350 F. I need to know if that combination of time and temperature resulted in any significant annealing of that brass. If it did, I will have to throw out those cases and I don't want to unless I have to. Thanks in advance for helping a biology guy out who is definitely not a materials science guy.
Superb work sir.
Thank you so much
Please sir can you explain the annealing temperature atomized iron powder with three zone and its hold time including cooling.
Excellent video,
My idea is to mix powdered metals into forms and then heat or electro fuse into solid molds. The advantage is less over all work space and Less intense makes safer work and less likely for major catastrophe. Also smaller ovens, more specialized for each item will it work?
very good explaination
Mantap mamang🤟
Absolutely outstanding video, thank you! What resources would you recommend to apply these charts/equations for the ratios involved?
Hi Greg, thanks for your kind words. ASM heat treaters guide is a good resource. You might be able to find some specific material charts online for free
that video was incredible that presentation was humongous. name of the software being used to make this video?
Thanks for this video's
at first i was annoyed by the style of the video, probably because many other, stupid videos have the same vibe (mainly the music in the beginnign I think). Then I realized how on point the information is and how helpful the animations are, good job!
Thank you very useful
you are amazing man
Finding this all so confusing. So is tempered steel just heated up to 650c and allowed to slow air cool? Or does it still need quenching?
Awesome#Helpful#thanks
Tq for d video sir.
thanks
Good 👌
Please suggest heat treatment cycle for dia 800 mm crane wheel with material FORGED c55mn75, IS:1570
What I plan to get into soon…. Metallurgical engineering ❤
Which is hardest Martensite yha Cementite?
I'm glad you include ferienhiet cuzz Celsius means nothing to me
Is there such thing as a nonstick application for lawnmowers
This is awesome! Thank you so much for the explanation! Can you share with me the name of the software that you used to create the illustrations please?
I worked with an animator to creat this, unfortunately I don’t know what software he used.
Powerpoint 365
no i am more confused with all of those words, hardness, toughness, strength, is stronger material mean tougher? or more in strength, cause those go opposite ways
Great content, but you should put more distance between you and the microphone, consistently. It sounds like proximal effect is destroying frequency balance for most of your audio voiceover takes. The soundscape is dominated by ~100 Hz - ~400 Hz .. notching out 300 Hz by 8 db should clear up quite a bit of the existing _muddyness,_ and you may try bumping up 4 KHz a few db for sibilance legibility .. Great content, though - I had to sub! 😎
Very informational. However, the music is louder than the speaker and extremely distracting. Why does there have to be repeating rhythmic music? We are forced to read the close captioning to appreciate what the narrator is saying because we are bombarded with music that is not in the background - it the main sound here.
👍👍
Can we get the PPT for notes
kzhead.infog6yFmTTV43I?feature=shared Heat treatment, or heat treatment in English, is a process in which a material, usually a metal or metal alloy, is subjected to a controlled cycle of heating and cooling to change its physical and mechanical properties. This procedure is used to improve the hardness, strength, ductility, hardness, corrosion resistance and other characteristics of the material.
What's toughness? What kind of activity show this property?
@@MetallurgyData thanks!
Iam a little shocked that no mention of how to hold hardened rings for example that have been machined to size ready for finish grinding, avoid distortion in the hardening treatment so the final grind can be carried without distortion being a problem, I saw this process carried out in the 1950s, at Cooper split roller bearings in uk, it was 100% successful on any diameter of rings any shape or case hardened or full hardness, it was so simple heat soak quench stop quench put the item through the process with full flatness achieved, ready for grinding mostly one pass to finish size cost savings are self evident. Quench stop temp vital then air cool to room temperature hardness drops back slightly but maintains good hardness with high wear factors, section variation on materials is a consideration but can be overcome, one of the main plus here is cheaper steels can be utilised or case hardening, ?
Correction:TTTD by changing the time and holding the temperature,phase can be formed.
With what apps did you made this animation?
@@MetallurgyData ah thats fine. Im working on a school project that's why i asked. Thanks for replying tho.
How I can achieve bainite as a blacksmith? Help pls I'm a sword maker
Why is it not possible to make a metal more useful, heat treating can make it stronger, more resistant to impact, malleable, and ductile with just one process?
i'm here becasue of my module activity
Thank you, good video however a few less animations would've helped me - at least - focus better. Just some constructive criticism.
Quench the music!!
Why does that intro sound so familiar
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6:40
Heat the metal, cool it down. So simple!
Not as simple as you may think. Depending on the metal composition, you need different temperatures for hardening and tempering. Plus your cooling cycles are different for normalization, annealing, treating and tempering. The hard part is knowing the composition of your metal if it is recycled material. It seems simple, but knowledge makes a difference.
@@bernardleighan3218 The hard part is knowing. I'll agree with that.
Supe8
I hate metallurgy.