Introduction

Vacuum heat treatment eliminates oxidation and decarburisation by removing the atmosphere entirely, enabling tool steels, high-speed steels, and aerospace alloys to emerge from the hardening process with clean, bright surfaces and precise dimensional control. For precision tooling — dies, moulds, cutting tools, and aerospace components — vacuum hardening with high-pressure gas quenching (HPGQ) is the gold standard process.

Vacuum Furnace Technology

Modern vacuum furnaces for tool steel hardening incorporate several key design features:

Annealing Process Types — Temperature Ranges Relative to A1 and A3 0°C 400 700 727 A1 800 912 A3 950+ A1 A3 Stress Relief550–650°C Spheroidise690–720°C Full Anneal30–50°C above A3 Normaliseabove A3, air cool No phase change Spheroidite forms Coarse pearlite Fine pearlite © metallurgyzone.com/
Figure: Steel annealing process types and their temperature ranges relative to A1 (727°C) and A3 (912°C) critical temperatures. © metallurgyzone.com/

Heating Cycle Design for Tool Steels

Tool steels require multi-stage preheating to prevent thermal shock cracking and ensure temperature uniformity before austenitising:

Steel Family Grade Preheat 1 (°C) Preheat 2 (°C) Austenitise (°C) Quench
Hot work H13 450–500 850–900 1,000–1,040 6–10 bar N₂
Cold work D2 450–500 800–850 1,000–1,040 6 bar N₂ or oil #f9f6f0
Cold work A2 450–500 790 950–970 2–4 bar N₂
High speed M2 450–500 850 1,200–1,230 6 bar N₂ or oil #f9f6f0
Stainless 420 450 750 1,010–1,065 4–6 bar N₂
PH stainless 17-4 PH 1,040 2 bar N₂ #f9f6f0

Soak times at austenitising temperature: typically 20–30 minutes for tools up to 50mm section thickness, plus 5 minutes per additional 25mm. Insufficient soak time leaves undissolved carbides, limiting achievable hardness. Excessive soak time causes grain coarsening.

High-Pressure Gas Quenching: Metallurgy and Severity

The quench severity of HPGQ depends on gas pressure, flow velocity (m/s), and gas type (N₂ vs He vs H₂). Approximate equivalences:

Quench Medium Equivalent H-value Achievable Martensite — Section Size
2 bar N₂ ~0.05 Air-hardening grades only (H13, A2) up to 250mm
6 bar N₂ ~0.35–0.40 5% Cr steels (H13, H11) up to 150mm; M2 up to 50mm #f9f6f0
10 bar N₂ ~0.5–0.6 D2, M2 up to 100mm; high-hardenability steels
20 bar N₂ ~0.7–0.8 Approaching oil quench severity; most tool steels #f9f6f0
6 bar He ~0.6 Helium provides faster heat extraction than N₂ at same pressure
Oil quench (ref.) 0.4–0.7 Reference: conventional comparison #f9f6f0

Metallurgical Outcomes: H13 Hot-Work Tool Steel

H13 (5% Cr, 1.5% Mo, 1% V) is the most widely vacuum-hardened tool steel globally, used for aluminium die casting dies, extrusion tooling, and forging dies. Target hardness after vacuum hardening + double temper:

Dimensional Control and Distortion

Vacuum HPGQ produces dramatically less distortion than oil quenching because:

For complex die-casting dies machined to near-final dimensions before hardening, dimensional change after vacuum hardening is typically 0.05–0.15% (linear) — predictable and compensatable by appropriate die design allowances. This compares with 0.2–0.5% (and unpredictable) change for salt bath or oil quenching.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can carbon steels be vacuum hardened?

A: Yes, but the economic justification is limited to high-value parts or those requiring a bright surface without post-hardening cleaning. For plain carbon and low-alloy steels, conventional atmosphere hardening with endothermic gas protection is more economical.

Q: What is partial pressure hardening?

A: When heating reactive alloys (titanium, some tool steels with high Cr/Al) in vacuum, the very low oxygen partial pressure at high vacuum can cause selective evaporation of chromium from the steel surface. A partial pressure of 0.1–1.3 mbar of N₂ or Ar is maintained during heating above 900°C to suppress this effect while still preventing gross oxidation.

Conclusion

Vacuum heat treatment delivers the highest quality hardened tool steel components available — bright surfaces, minimal distortion, uniform hardness throughout complex shapes, and full traceability through computer-controlled process records. For H13 die casting dies, D2 blanking dies, and M2 cutting tools, vacuum hardening with HPGQ is the process of choice. See also: Tool Steel Classification Guide and Annealing Processes in Steel.

References

📚 RELATED ARTICLES & TOOLS

→ Tool Steel Classification→ Quenching Steel Guide→ Retained Austenite→ Hardness Conversion Calculator→ CCT Diagram Guide

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