Influence of plasma molybdenizing and shot-peening on fretting damage behavior of titanium alloy

Chang bin Tang, Dao xin Liu, Bin Tang, Xiao hua Zhang, Lin Qin, Cheng song Liu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

51 Scopus citations

Abstract

Effect of plasma molybdenizing and shot-peening on fretting wear and fretting fatigue behaviors of Ti6Al4V alloy was investigated. The plasma molybdenized layer composed of a dense molybdenum deposition layer and a Mo–Ti solid–solution layer can increase surface hardness by 2.8 times and cause its volume loss by fretting wear to decrease to 1/14 compared with that of the substrate. Plasma molybdenized treatment results in a significant decrease in resistance of the substrate to fretting fatigue. It is ascribed that the molybdenized layer with high hardness yields a low toughness, and its high surface roughness leads to a micro-notched effect. However, proper combination plasma molybdenizing and subsequent shot-peening may enhance the simultaneous fretting fatigue and fretting wear resistance of Ti6Al4V significantly, which can decrease the fretting wear volume loss to 1/27, and may increase the fretting fatigue life by more than 69 times. A synergistic improvement in fretting fatigue of the titanium alloy by combining surface alloying with shot-peening can be achieved. The results indicate that a beneficial residual compressive stress distribution, high surface hardness with suitable hardness gradient distribution, good apparent toughness, relatively low surface roughness, and excellent surface integrity are achieved.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)946-958
Number of pages13
JournalApplied Surface Science
Volume390
DOIs
StatePublished - 30 Dec 2016

Keywords

  • Fretting fatigue
  • Fretting wear
  • Plasma molybdenizing
  • Shot-peening
  • Titanium alloy

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