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CNC Milling & Aluminum Heat Treatment

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CNC Milling & Aluminum Heat Treatment

October 26, 2021

Part of the designing and engineering process is to determine what physical properties the part needs and the best metal chose to provide those requirements. Having metal alloys heat treated, either before or after machining, can immensely improve key physical properties. Heating treatments can add to the hardness of the metal, its strength, or its machinability.
When are heat treatments applied?
Here are a couple of basic rules that are followed as to when heat treatment is applied to metal alloys:
Before CNC machining: When the grade of metal requested is a standardized grade, then the part is made out of stock that has already been heat treated to the proper degree.
Post CNC machining: If the metal alloy needs to be significantly harder than a standardized grade, then the heat treatment happens after the machining process. Harder metals are more difficult to machine. This post machining heat treatment is common when tool steel is being used.
What are some common heat treatment processes for CNC materials?
Heat treatments are a technique that have been developed to either make metals more workable during the manufacturing process or to improve the material characteristics after machining has been completed. Applying heat and other elements to metal parts in strategic ways enables the creation of parts with superior ductility, hardness, toughness, and other properties.
Here are some of the most common heat treatments for CNC-machined metal parts.
Annealing
The annealing process involves heating metals to a critical temperature, which varies by alloy, maintaining that temperature for a period of time, and then slowly air cooling the metal to create the desired microstructure within the metal.
Annealing is typically applied to metal alloys after forming to increase the ductility of the material, which makes harder metals less prone to cracking or fracturing during the machining process.
Case hardening
Case hardening is a heat treatment method that increases the hardness of the exterior layer of carbon or alloy steel without hardening the interior material. Metals like iron and steel often have a low carbon content, so applying a combination of heat and a carbon-rich substance to the surface gives an otherwise low-carbon alloy a high-carbon, hardened exterior. This makes case hardening ideal for applications that require flexibility but a durable, wear-resistance outer layer, such as engine camshafts.
While hardening processes provide tremendous improvements to the strength of metals, they also tend to increase the material’s brittleness. For that reason, case hardening is typically performed after machining.
Stress relieving
CNC machining can create stress within part material that, if left untreated, can severely compromise the part’s overall quality. Like annealing, stress relieving involves heating metal alloys to high temperatures and slowly cooling them. However, unlike annealing, this heat treatment is applied after the machining process to remove residual stresses. Stress relieving improves the mechanical properties of a part without changing the material’s structure or hardness.
Quenching and tempering
Also known as martensitic transformation, quenching and tempering is a two-part method specifically designed to increase the hardness of steel parts.
In the quenching process, the steel or steel alloy is heated to a high temperature, which causes the iron’s crystalline structure to change from ferrite to austenite. This allows the metal to absorb more carbon.
The steel is then rapidly cooled to “lock in” the iron phase change, while the addition of carbon results in an extremely strong crystal lattice structure called martensite, which has excellent surface hardness properties.
Tempering, on the other hand, is the process of heating metals to high temperatures (although temperatures much lower than the material’s critical temperature, as opposed to annealing) after the metal has been quenched. This reduces the material’s brittleness, while improving its toughness and prolonging the life of the part.
Precipitation hardening
Precipitation hardening is used to increase the strength of malleable metals like aluminum, stainless steels, and superalloys. The process is similar to quenching and tempering and involves heating metal to a high temperature, quenching it, then heating it to a lower temperature for an elongated period. This allows precipitates in the alloy to disperse and reduce dislocation (irregularity) movement within the microstructure, drastically increasing the strength and hardness of the metal.
Choosing the ideal heat treatment process
Heat treatments can deliver incredible improvements to the material properties of metal parts. However, it’s important for product teams to do their research to determine which heat treatment is best-suited for a given part. While quenching and tempering may be ideal for creating high strength steels, it’s a far less useful process for treating aluminum alloys. Luckily, determining which treatment process is right for you is made simpler with the help of a trusted manufacturing partner.
When you place an order with GPT Precision online CNC services, you have three ways to request a heat treatment:
Give a reference to a manufacturing standard: Provide the standardized heat treatment indicator, like T6 for aluminum alloys.
Specify the required hardness: This method is normal for requesting hardness that is applied to the metal after machining is done.
Specify the heat treatment cycle: If you understand how different heat treatments affect metal, then you can specify which heat treatment processes you want.

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