Manufacturing Metallurgy 📅 March 25, 2026 ⏳ 14 min read 👤 MetallurgyZone

Vacuum Heat Treatment of Tool Steels: Furnace Technology, High-Pressure Gas Quenching, and Metallurgical Outcomes

Vacuum heat treatment with high-pressure gas quenching (HPGQ) is the gold-standard process for hardening precision tool steels, high-speed steels, and aerospace structural alloys. By removing the atmosphere to partial pressures of 10−4–10−6 mbar, the process eliminates oxidation and decarburisation entirely — the two principal metallurgical defects produced by conventional atmosphere hardening. The result is a bright, clean surface retaining full surface carbon, uniform through-hardness, and distortion typically 3–10× lower than oil or salt-bath quenching. This guide covers the complete technology chain from furnace design and vacuum system engineering through CCT-based cycle design, grade-specific hardening parameters, secondary hardening mechanisms, retained austenite control, and qualification requirements for aerospace and die tooling applications.

Key Takeaways

  • Vacuum eliminates oxidation and decarburisation; partial pressure (0.13–1.3 mbar N₂/Ar) is maintained above 900 °C to prevent chromium evaporation from highly alloyed grades.
  • All-metal hot zones (Mo foil + stainless steel) give fastest thermal response and lowest contamination; graphite hot zones are lower cost but unsuitable for reactive alloys.
  • HPGQ at 6 bar N₂ achieves H ≈ 0.35–0.40 (equivalent to a moderate agitated oil quench); 20 bar N₂ approaches H ≈ 0.7–0.8.
  • H13 standard cycle: 1,020 °C × 30 min → 6–10 bar N₂ → double temper 540–600 °C × 2 hr → 44–52 HRC.
  • M2 secondary hardening peaks at 540–560 °C from M₂C and MC carbide precipitation; triple temper required for precision tooling.
  • Dimensional change from vacuum HPGQ is typically 0.05–0.15% linear vs. 0.2–0.5% (unpredictable) for oil quenching.
Horizontal Vacuum Furnace — System Schematic Mo foil radiation shields (×3–7 layers) LOAD / CHARGE (Tool die / mould block) Load TC Ctrl TC Heating elements Fan (centrifugal) Heat Exchanger N₂/He quench gas Diffusion Pump 10⁻⁴–10⁻⁶ mbar (or turbomolecular) Roots Blower 10⁻²–10⁻⁴ mbar Rotary Vane Roughing Pump atm → 10⁻² mbar N₂ in Vacuum 10⁻⁴ mbar HPGQ 2–20 bar N₂ / He / H₂ © metallurgyzone.com — Schematic; commercial furnaces vary in configuration. Hot zone and load dimensions not to scale.
Fig. 1 — Horizontal vacuum furnace cross-section. The load sits inside the all-metal hot zone (molybdenum foil radiation shields, electric resistance heating elements). The vacuum system stages from rotary vane roughing pump through Roots blower to diffusion or turbomolecular pump, achieving partial pressures of 10−4–10−6 mbar during heating. During HPGQ, the vessel is rapidly backfilled to 2–20 bar with N₂ or He; a centrifugal fan circulates the gas through the load and through an external water-cooled heat exchanger. © metallurgyzone.com

Vacuum Furnace Design and Technology

A vacuum furnace for tool steel hardening is fundamentally a pressure vessel engineered to function at two pressure extremes in the same cycle: sub-millibar vacuum during heating and austenitising, and pressures up to 20 bar absolute during gas quenching. Understanding each subsystem is prerequisite to specifying cycles and achieving repeatable metallurgical results.

Hot Zone Construction: All-Metal vs Graphite

The hot zone contains the load and generates the required temperatures through electric resistance heating. Two construction philosophies dominate commercial practice:

Feature All-Metal Hot Zone (Mo + SS foil) Graphite Hot Zone
Heating elementsMolybdenum rod/wire, maximum 1,600 °C continuousGraphite rod/felt, maximum 2,000 °C
Radiation shieldsMo foil + 304 SS foil layers (3–7 layers)Graphite felt + board insulation
Thermal massLow — fast heat-up and cool-downHigh — slower thermal response
ContaminationMinimal; clean for reactive alloys (Ti, Al alloys, high-Cr steels)Carbon pick-up risk at high T; unsuitable for Ti, Al alloys
Atmosphere during HPGQN₂, He, Ar — all suitableN₂ only (graphite reacts with H₂ at temperature)
CostHigher (Mo is expensive)Lower
Suitability for tool steelsPreferred — highest quality, fastest cyclesAcceptable for non-reactive grades (M2, H13) at cost-competitive price
Suitability for aerospace alloysRequired (Ti-6Al-4V, Inconel, aluminium alloys)Not suitable for reactive alloys

Table 1 — All-metal vs graphite hot zone comparison for vacuum heat treatment of tool steels and precision alloys.

Vacuum Pumping System

Achieving and maintaining the required partial pressure during heating requires a staged pumping system. The three-stage configuration dominates industrial practice:

  • Rotary vane mechanical pump (roughing): Evacuates the vessel from atmospheric pressure (1,013 mbar) to approximately 0.1–1 mbar. Displacement typically 100–1,000 m³/hr. Oil-sealed versions are most common; dry scroll pumps are used in semiconductor and ultra-clean applications.
  • Roots blower (booster): Connected in series with the roughing pump; extends the achievable vacuum to 10−3 mbar range with higher volumetric throughput. Essential for reducing pump-down time on large furnaces.
  • Diffusion pump or turbomolecular pump: Achieves high vacuum (10−4–10−6 mbar). Diffusion pumps use heated oil vapour jets; turbomolecular pumps are oil-free and preferred where contamination is critical. Both require a backing pump to operate.
Leak rate testing: Every vacuum furnace must be leak-tested before production use. The acceptable leak rate for a tool steel vacuum furnace is typically <10 μmHg/hr (approximately 13 mbar·L/min/m² of vessel surface). A failing leak test means oxygen ingress during heating, resulting in oxidation, decarburisation, and surface defects — the exact defects that vacuum hardening is designed to prevent. Leak testing is performed by pumping down to high vacuum, isolating the pumps, and monitoring pressure rise over 30–60 minutes.

Temperature Uniformity and Control

AMS 2750 (Nadcap Pyrometry Standard for aerospace) and AIAG CQI-9 (automotive tooling) both specify temperature uniformity requirements. AMS 2750 Class 4 (± 8 °C) is the minimum for standard tool steel hardening; Class 2 (± 3 °C) is required for aerospace component heat treatment. Temperature uniformity surveys (TUS) must be performed at regular intervals (at least annually for AMS 2750) using calibrated survey thermocouples distributed through the working zone. The load thermocouple — placed in contact with or embedded in the actual part or a representative mass — controls the austenitising soak timer, not the furnace thermocouple. This distinction is critical for ensuring adequate carbon dissolution regardless of load mass.

Heating Cycle Design: Preheating, Austenitising, and Soak Time

Tool steels are high-alloy materials with low thermal conductivity. Rapid heating through the transformation range and into the austenitising temperature causes steep thermal gradients, differential expansion, and potential cracking in complex shapes. Multi-stage preheating eliminates this risk by equalising the load temperature at intermediate steps before the final ramp to austenitising temperature.

Standard Preheating Stages

Three-stage preheating sequence (heavy die blocks >100 mm section):

  Stage 1: 400–500°C  — Stress relief; above martensite start (Ms) of
            any pre-hardened surface; slow ramp 3–5°C/min above 300°C.
            Hold: 30 min + 1 min/mm ruling section.

  Stage 2: 750–850°C  — Just below austenitising temperature; allows
            carbides to begin dissolving and temperature to equalise.
            Hold: 20–30 min for sections up to 75 mm.

  Stage 3: Austenitising (grade-specific: 950–1,230°C)
            Ramp from stage 2 as fast as furnace allows.
            Hold: 20–30 min for <50 mm + 5 min per additional 25 mm section.

Rapid temperature increase directly to austenitising:
  For small tools <25 mm section in pre-hardened steels only;
  acceptable because thermal gradients are small at that scale.

Austenitising Temperature Selection: The Carbon Dissolution Balance

The austenitising temperature is the single most critical process variable in vacuum tool steel hardening. It must be high enough to dissolve sufficient alloy carbides to achieve the target hardness, but low enough to avoid grain coarsening and carbide dissolution beyond the optimal point. The relationship is not monotonic: both under- and over-austenitising produce inferior properties.

  • Under-austenitising (too low T or too short soak): Carbides remain undissolved. Insufficient carbon and alloy elements enter solution. As-quenched hardness falls short of specification. Insufficient secondary hardening in tempering response (M2, H13). Result: low as-hardened and final hardness.
  • Correct austenitising: Optimal balance of carbide dissolution vs grain size retention. Maximum achievable hardness for the grade. Grain size typically ASTM 7–10 (fine to medium fine). Result: target hardness and toughness combination.
  • Over-austenitising (too high T or excessive soak): Grain boundary carbon films from excessive carbide dissolution. Rapid grain coarsening (ASTM < 5). Excess retained austenite from Ms temperature depression. Result: reduced toughness, increased distortion, scale defects at grain boundaries.

Grade-Specific Vacuum Hardening Cycles

H13 / X40CrMoV5-1
Hot-work die steel — die casting, extrusion, forging
44–52 HRC
1
Preheat 1: 450–500 °C, hold 30 min
2
Preheat 2: 850–900 °C, hold 20 min
3
Austenitise: 1,000–1,040 °C, 25–35 min; partial pressure 0.13 mbar N₂
4
Quench: 6–10 bar N₂ to below 65 °C
5
Double temper: 540–600 °C × 2 hr × 2 cycles
Final hardness: 44–52 HRC (600 °C → 44 HRC max toughness; 540 °C → 52 HRC max wear)
D2 / X155CrVMo12-1
Cold-work die steel — blanking, punching, forming
58–62 HRC
1
Preheat 1: 450–500 °C, hold 30 min
2
Preheat 2: 800–850 °C, hold 20 min
3
Austenitise: 1,000–1,040 °C, 25–30 min; partial pressure N₂
4
Quench: 6–10 bar N₂ or interrupted oil; cool to below 65 °C
4b
Sub-zero (optional): −60 °C × 1 hr — converts RA before tempering
5
Temper × 2–3: 180–260 °C × 2 hr each cycle
Final hardness: 58–62 HRC; dimensional change ±0.05–0.10%
M2 / S6-5-2
High-speed steel — drills, end mills, taps, broaches
62–65 HRC
1
Preheat 1: 450–500 °C, hold 20 min
2
Preheat 2: 850 °C, hold 15 min
3
Austenitise: 1,200–1,230 °C, 4–8 min; partial pressure 0.5–1.3 mbar N₂
4
Quench: 6–10 bar N₂; rapid to below 65 °C. As-quenched: 62–64 HRC
4b
Sub-zero: −80 °C × 1 hr — mandatory for precision tools
5
Triple temper: 540–560 °C × 1.5–2 hr × 3 cycles — secondary hardening peak
Final hardness: 62–65 HRC; RA <2% after triple temper
A2 / X100CrMoV5
Air-hardening cold work — gauges, punches, shear blades
57–62 HRC
1
Preheat: 450–500 °C then 790 °C, hold 15–20 min each
2
Austenitise: 950–970 °C, 20–25 min; standard vacuum (no partial pressure needed at this temperature)
3
Quench: 2–4 bar N₂ — air-hardening grade; slow quench acceptable
4
Temper × 2: 150–200 °C × 2 hr each cycle
Final hardness: 57–62 HRC; excellent dimensional stability

High-Pressure Gas Quenching: Metallurgy and Process Physics

HPGQ is the feature that differentiates modern vacuum furnaces from earlier vacuum batch furnaces with low-pressure gas cooling. The fundamental objective is to extract heat from the load surface faster than the CCT diagram’s bainite and pearlite transformation noses, ensuring the entire cross-section transforms to martensite. The physics of gas quenching involves forced convection heat transfer, and the controlling parameters are gas pressure, velocity, thermal conductivity, and heat capacity.

Quench Severity: Gas Pressure and the H-Value

Heat transfer coefficient h in forced convection HPGQ:

  h ∝ P^0.7 × v^0.6 × λ^0.6  [W/m²·K]

Where:
  P = gas pressure [bar]
  v = gas velocity [m/s]  (fan speed)
  λ = thermal conductivity of gas [W/m·K]

Gas thermal conductivities (at 20°C):
  N₂:  0.026 W/m·K
  He:   0.150 W/m·K  (5.8× nitrogen)
  H₂:  0.180 W/m·K  (7× nitrogen)
  Ar:   0.018 W/m·K  (0.7× nitrogen — slowest)

Practical consequence: He at 6 bar ≈ N₂ at 10–12 bar in heat
extraction capacity. H₂ is most effective but rarely used
due to explosion hazard at furnace backfill pressures.

Grossmann H-value equivalents (indicative):
  2 bar N₂  ≈ 0.05 (still air equivalent)
  4 bar N₂  ≈ 0.20–0.25
  6 bar N₂  ≈ 0.35–0.40
  10 bar N₂ ≈ 0.50–0.60
  20 bar N₂ ≈ 0.70–0.80
  Oil quench (agitated) ≈ 0.40–0.70 (reference)

CCT-Based Quench Requirement Selection

Selecting the correct quench pressure requires comparing the required cooling rate (from the CCT diagram for the specific grade) with the achievable cooling rate at the centre of the heaviest section being processed. For H13, the bainite nose on the CCT diagram is at approximately 450–500 °C with a critical cooling rate of approximately 8–15 °C/min — a relatively wide processing window that 6 bar N₂ easily satisfies for sections up to 300 mm. For M2 and D2, the bainite/pearlite noses are at higher temperatures and shorter times, demanding faster quench rates. For a 100 mm diameter D2 billet, 10 bar N₂ achieves approximately 15–20 °C/s at the surface and 6–8 °C/s at the centre — sufficient for full martensite, but only marginally. See the CCT diagram guide for interpreting continuous cooling transformation diagrams used in quench severity selection.

Grade Min Quench Rate (surface) Recommended HPGQ Max Section (full hardening) Alternative
H13~5–10 °C/s at 800–500 °C6–10 bar N₂350 mm diameter10 bar He for larger sections
H11~5 °C/s4–6 bar N₂400 mm diameter4 bar N₂ acceptable
D2~10–20 °C/s10–20 bar N₂100 mm for vacuum; >100 mm: oil6 bar He
A2~2–5 °C/s (air-hardening)2–4 bar N₂300 mm diameter2 bar N₂ sufficient
M2~20–40 °C/s6–10 bar N₂75 mm for vacuum; larger: oil6 bar He or interrupted oil
M4 / M42~15–30 °C/s6–10 bar N₂50–75 mmOil for large blanks

Table 2 — HPGQ pressure requirements by tool steel grade. Critical cooling rates are approximate centresurface values from CCT diagram literature. Section sizes for full hardening assume cylindrical geometry; complex shapes require simulation or empirical validation.

Secondary Hardening: High-Speed Steel Tempering Metallurgy

High-speed steels (M2, M4, T1, T15, M42) are the only class of engineering steels that harden on tempering — a phenomenon called secondary hardening. Understanding the mechanism is essential for designing correct tempering cycles and achieving the target hardness of 62–65 HRC in finished cutting tools.

Carbide Precipitation Mechanism

After austenitising at 1,200–1,230 °C and HPGQ, M2 has a matrix of highly alloyed supersaturated martensite (approximately 0.4–0.5 wt%C in solution, plus dissolved Mo, W, V, Cr) with 25–35% retained austenite and undissolved primary carbides (MC and M6C). During tempering at 540–560 °C:

  • Matrix stage (softening): Carbon and alloy atoms begin diffusing out of martensite; dislocation density decreases; matrix softens. This alone would produce 54–56 HRC.
  • Carbide precipitation stage (hardening): Fine M2C carbides (hexagonal, Mo-rich) and MC carbides (cubic, V-rich) precipitate coherently on specific habit planes (primarily {011}α). Average particle diameter 2–5 nm at peak hardness. Precipitate number density exceeds 1023/m³. These particles pin dislocations by the Orowan bypassing mechanism and contribute more to hardness than the martensite strengthening they replace.
  • Net secondary hardening peak: Approximately 63–65 HRC at 540–560 °C, 2–4 HRC above the as-quenched as-tempered conventional grade hardness.

Why Triple Tempering is Required for M2

M2 retained austenite transformation during tempering:

  After quenching to room temperature:
    Microstructure: martensite (~65%) + RA (~30%) + primary carbides (~5%)
    As-quenched hardness: 62–64 HRC

  First temper 540–560°C × 2 hr:
    • Secondary hardening in martensite matrix
    • ~15–20% of RA transforms to FRESH martensite
      during cooling from temper temperature (RA is now
      unstable at room temperature after temper)
    • End of 1st temper: 63–65 HRC but ~10–15% RA remains
      PLUS fresh untempered martensite → brittle

  Second temper 540–560°C × 2 hr:
    • Tempers the fresh martensite from 1st temper
    • Converts additional RA → martensite (then tempered by
      cool-down)
    • RA now ≤5%; hardness stable at 62–65 HRC

  Third temper 540–560°C × 1–2 hr (precision tools):
    • Final temper of any remaining fresh martensite
    • Completes secondary carbide precipitation
    • Minimises residual stress; improves dimensional stability
    • RA <2%; hardness 62–65 HRC; ready for precision grinding

  Skip any temper → brittle tool; premature edge failure
M2 High-Speed Steel — Complete Vacuum Heat Treatment Cycle T(°C) Time 0 200 400 600 900 1100 1220 500°C PH1 850°C PH2 1,220°C × 6 min Partial pressure N₂ HPGQ 6–10 bar N₂ −80°C ×1 hr 550°C × 2 hr Temper 1 Temper 2 Temper 3 Secondary Hardening Peak As-quenched: 62–64 HRC → Final: 63–65 HRC M₃ ≈ 220°C Heating/preheat Austenitising HPGQ Tempering (×3) © metallurgyzone.com
Fig. 2 — Complete vacuum heat treatment cycle for M2 high-speed steel: two-stage preheating (500 °C, 850 °C), austenitising at 1,220 °C under partial pressure nitrogen, high-pressure gas quench (6–10 bar N₂) through the martensite start (Ms ≈ 220 °C), sub-zero treatment (−80 °C) to convert retained austenite, and three tempering cycles at 550 °C producing secondary hardening peak (63–65 HRC final). Skipping any tempering cycle leaves untempered martensite from retained austenite conversion — a cause of premature cutting tool failure. © metallurgyzone.com

Retained Austenite: Causes, Measurement, and Control

Retained austenite (RA) is the fraction of austenite that fails to transform to martensite during quenching because the martensite finish temperature (Mf) falls below ambient temperature. In tool steels, RA is unavoidable and results from the martensite suppression effect of dissolved carbon and alloy elements. Its presence reduces as-hardened hardness and dimensional stability, but appropriate post-quench treatments reduce RA to acceptable levels.

Carbon Content and the Ms/Mf Temperature

Empirical Ms temperature formulae for tool steels:

  Andrews (1965):
  Ms [°C] = 539 − 423×%C − 30.4×%Mn − 17.7×%Ni
             − 12.1×%Cr − 7.5×%Mo + 10×%Co

  M2 typical austenitised composition (dissolved):
    %C≈0.45, %Cr≈3.5, %Mo≈4.0, %W≈5.5, %V≈1.5
  Ms ≈ 539 − 423(0.45) − 12.1(3.5) − 7.5(4.0) ≈ 228°C

  Mf ≈ Ms − 100°C to Ms − 150°C  →  Mf ≈ 78–128°C

  Since quench stops at ~60–65°C (above Mf), some austenite
  cannot transform → RA fraction 25–35% as-quenched for M2.

  RA volume fraction (Koistinen-Marburger equation):
  f_γ = exp[−0.011 × (Ms − T_q)]
  where T_q = quench stop temperature [°C]
  At T_q=65°C: f_γ = exp[−0.011(228−65)] = exp(−1.79) ≈ 0.17
  (17% RA remaining — balance transforms during sub-zero and tempering)

Sub-Zero Treatment and Cryogenic Processing

Sub-zero treatment at −60 to −80 °C converts a further fraction of RA by extending the martensite transformation below the Mf temperature. It must be performed before the first temper: once retained austenite is stabilised by the first temper (a process called “austenite stabilisation” caused by carbon rearrangement at 25–150 °C), it resists subsequent transformation even at sub-zero temperatures. Deep cryogenic treatment at −196 °C (liquid nitrogen) converts substantially more RA than −80 °C, and commercial evidence suggests improved wear resistance and service life for precision cold-work tools. The mechanism is proposed to involve both RA conversion and finer, more uniform secondary carbide distribution during subsequent tempering, though the academic evidence for the carbide effect remains debated.

Dimensional Control and Distortion Minimisation

The economic justification for vacuum HPGQ over oil or salt bath hardening for precision tooling is primarily dimensional control. Precision injection mould tools and die-casting dies are frequently machined to final dimensions (or near-final dimensions with tight machining allowances) before heat treatment, because EDM finishing and hard machining after hardening is the cost-effective production sequence. For this to work reliably, dimensional changes during heat treatment must be predictable and small.

Sources of Dimensional Change

  • Martensite transformation expansion: The BCC (BCT) martensite lattice has larger volume than the FCC austenite it replaces. Volume expansion ≈ 0.4 × %C (%), so M2 with 0.45%C in solution expands approximately 0.18% volumetrically (0.06% linear). This expansion is predictable and can be designed into die dimensions.
  • Thermal distortion: Differential thermal gradients during heating and cooling create differential expansion and contraction. Minimised by slow preheating ramps, uniform load temperature at preheat holds, and symmetric HPGQ flow.
  • Residual stress relaxation: If machining created residual stresses (from grinding, EDM re-cast layer, or rough machining stress), these relax during austenitising and can cause shape change. Pre-heat-treatment stress relief at 650–700 °C for 2 hours eliminates this source.
Practical distortion data: For H13 die casting die blocks (500 × 400 × 150 mm) processed to 44–48 HRC by vacuum HPGQ with 6 bar N₂, typical dimensional changes are 0.05–0.12% linear and highly repeatable between production runs in the same furnace. Oil quenching of the same block produces 0.20–0.40% change with significant variability between loads due to oil flow asymmetry, vapour blanket irregularities, and racking variation. The predictability of vacuum distortion allows die designers to build in systematic allowances, effectively eliminating post-heat-treatment straightening for most die geometries.

Aerospace Qualification: AMS 2750 and Nadcap

Vacuum heat treatment of aerospace components (turbine blade alloys, landing gear steels, titanium structural parts) must comply with AMS 2750 (Pyrometry) and be performed in Nadcap-accredited facilities. The key requirements beyond process specification are:

  • Furnace temperature uniformity survey (TUS): Minimum 9 survey thermocouples distributed through the work zone; survey at every qualified temperature ±14 °C; frequency quarterly (annual if process stability is demonstrated). Working zone must achieve Class 2 (±3 °C) or Class 3 (±5 °C) depending on material and application.
  • System accuracy test (SAT): Monthly comparison between a calibrated reference thermocouple and the furnace control thermocouple at operating temperature. Acceptable deviation ±2.2 °C for Class A instruments.
  • Thermocouple calibration: All thermocouples calibrated against NIST-traceable standards; Type N or Type K for tool steel range (−200 to 1,260 °C); Type R or S for high-speed steel austenitising.
  • Load thermocouple requirement: For most aerospace specifications, a thermocouple must be placed in direct contact with the part or a test coupon of equivalent mass to control the soak timer from part temperature, not furnace temperature.
  • Process records: Time-temperature charts (electronic or paper) for every load; retention period typically 10 years for aerospace components; must be available for customer review and Nadcap audit.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is vacuum heat treatment preferred over atmosphere or salt bath hardening for tool steels?
Vacuum heat treatment eliminates oxidation and decarburisation by maintaining oxygen partial pressure at 10−4–10−6 mbar — too low to sustain any surface reaction. The result is a bright, clean surface with full carbon retained, eliminating the soft decarburised skin produced by atmosphere furnaces and removing the need for post-hardening descaling or shot blasting. HPGQ provides more uniform and controllable quenching than oil or salt baths, dramatically reducing distortion on precision dies and moulds. The process is fully computer-controlled and traceable, critical for aerospace and medical tooling qualification. The main limitation versus atmosphere hardening is that HPGQ at 20 bar N₂ does not fully match oil quench severity for very large sections or low-hardenability grades.
What is partial pressure control in vacuum heat treatment and why is it necessary?
At high vacuum (below 10−3 mbar) and temperatures above 900 °C, the vapour pressure of chromium becomes significant — Cr atoms evaporate from the steel surface faster than diffusion replenishes them from the bulk. This selective chromium vaporisation depletes the near-surface zone, producing a non-stainless surface with reduced hardness and corrosion resistance. To prevent this, a partial pressure of 0.13–1.3 mbar of N₂ or Ar is maintained during the high-temperature soak. This suppresses the driving force for Cr evaporation without preventing hardening. Partial pressure control is mandatory for H13, D2, M2, and all highly alloyed tool steels above 900 °C.
What austenitising temperature should be used for H13 hot-work tool steel?
H13 is vacuum hardened from 1,000–1,040 °C. The lower end (1,000–1,010 °C) preserves undissolved vanadium carbides that pin grain boundaries and maintain fine grain size (ASTM 8–10), giving maximum toughness — preferred for tooling subject to impact loading. The upper end (1,025–1,040 °C) dissolves more carbides, achieving greater hot hardness retention at elevated service temperatures above 600 °C — preferred for die casting dies in aluminium alloy production. Above 1,050 °C, rapid grain coarsening occurs (ASTM < 7) and toughness drops sharply. Soak time is typically 25–35 min for sections up to 75 mm, plus 5 min per additional 25 mm.
What causes secondary hardening in high-speed steels and at what temperature does it occur?
Secondary hardening arises from the precipitation of fine alloy carbides (M2C and MC) from the supersaturated martensite matrix during tempering at 540–560 °C. These nanoscale particles (2–5 nm diameter) pin dislocations by the Orowan bypassing mechanism, contributing more to hardness than the martensite strengthening they partially replace. Peak secondary hardening in M2 occurs at 540–560 °C, producing 63–65 HRC from an as-quenched 62–64 HRC. Multiple tempering cycles are required because retained austenite transforms to fresh untempered martensite during each cooling from the tempering temperature; each subsequent temper cycles this fresh martensite and continues carbide precipitation.
How much retained austenite is acceptable in vacuum-hardened H13 and D2?
For H13 hot-work tooling: after double temper at 560–600 °C, residual RA of 2–5% is acceptable for die casting dies. For D2 cold-work tool steel with high carbon content: after double/triple tempering at 180–260 °C, residual RA of 5–12% is typical; for precision blanking dies requiring dimensional stability, sub-zero treatment at −60 to −80 °C before the first temper reduces this to below 3%. RA is measured by X-ray diffraction (ASTM E975) as a routine production quality check for high-value tooling. Excessive RA causes hardness shortfall, dimensional instability, and reduced fatigue resistance in cyclic loading.
What is the difference between 6 bar and 20 bar nitrogen quenching for tool steels?
Gas quench severity increases with pressure, gas velocity, and gas thermal conductivity. At 6 bar N₂, the cooling rate at the surface of a 100 mm diameter H13 billet is approximately 25–35 °C/s — sufficient for full martensite in H13 and other 5% Cr hot-work steels. At 20 bar N₂, cooling rate increases to 60–80 °C/s, approaching an agitated oil quench. For D2 and M2 requiring faster quenching to clear the bainite nose, 10–20 bar N₂ is recommended for sections above 50–75 mm. Helium at equal pressure extracts approximately 1.5–2× more heat than nitrogen due to its six-times higher thermal conductivity, but costs 8–15× more per cubic metre. The choice between gas pressure and gas type is an economic optimisation for each production scenario.
What distortion mechanisms occur during vacuum hardening and how are they minimised?
Two independent mechanisms cause distortion: (1) thermal distortion from differential thermal gradients during heating and cooling — minimised by multi-stage preheating, uniform HPGQ gas flow, and symmetric load fixturing; (2) transformation distortion from non-uniform martensite formation across complex shapes — minimised by ensuring complete through-temperature uniformity before quenching, and by reducing retained austenite (which delays the volume expansion of martensite transformation). Machining-induced residual stresses that relax during austenitising are a third source — eliminated by pre-heat-treatment stress relieving at 650–700 °C. Typical vacuum HPGQ dimensional change on H13 die blocks is 0.05–0.12% linear and highly repeatable — 3–10× better than oil quenching.
What is the recommended double tempering cycle for M2 high-speed steel after vacuum hardening?
The standard post-quench sequence for M2 precision tooling: (1) Sub-zero at −80 °C × 1 hr immediately after cooling to ambient — converts ~10% RA; (2) First temper 540–560 °C × 2 hr — secondary hardening and partial RA conversion; (3) Second temper 540–560 °C × 2 hr — tempers fresh martensite from RA conversion; (4) Third temper 540–560 °C × 1.5 hr or 200 °C × 2 hr (stress relief) for precision tools. Final hardness: 62–65 HRC; RA <2% after triple temper. Each temper temperature must be controlled to ±5 °C — exceeding 600 °C causes rapid hardness loss from carbide coarsening and martensite overtempering.
Can stainless steels be vacuum hardened alongside tool steels?
Martensitic stainless steels (420, 440C, 17-4 PH, 15-5 PH) are routinely vacuum hardened and aged in the same furnaces as tool steels. Mixed loads are feasible when required temperatures coincide: H13 (1,020 °C) alongside 420 SS (1,010–1,050 °C) is practical. Running M2 (1,200 °C) alongside 17-4 PH solution treatment (1,040 °C) is not compatible. Austenitic stainless steels should never be mixed with tool steels at high temperature due to chromium vapour cross-contamination risk at the tool surface. The key compatibility check is comparing austenitising/solution temperatures and ensuring tempering/ageing temperatures are also compatible.

Recommended References

📚
ASM Handbook Vol. 4A — Steel Heat Treating Fundamentals and Processes
The definitive reference for vacuum hardening, HPGQ, tool steel cycles, secondary hardening, retained austenite control, and AMS 2750 pyrometry requirements.
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📚
Steels: Processing, Structure and Performance — Krauss
Graduate-level treatment of martensite, retained austenite, secondary hardening in high-speed steels, and the metallurgical basis of tool steel performance in service.
View on Amazon
📚
Atmosphere Heat Treatment — Herring
Comprehensive two-volume reference covering vacuum furnace design, hot zones, pumping systems, HPGQ, partial pressure control, and alloy-specific hardening protocols.
View on Amazon
📚
Tool Steels — Roberts, Krauss, Kennedy (ASM 5th Ed.)
The complete tool steel reference: composition, heat treatment cycles, microstructure, mechanical properties, and application guidelines for all AISI and DIN grades.
View on Amazon

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Further Reading

TTT
TTT Diagram Explained
Time-temperature-transformation diagrams: the thermodynamic basis for reading isothermal transformation kinetics used in quench severity selection.
CCT
CCT Diagram vs TTT
Reading continuous cooling transformation diagrams: how to determine the minimum quench rate and choose between 6, 10, and 20 bar N₂ for a specific grade.
M
Martensite Formation in Steel
Ms temperature formulae, Koistinen-Marburger kinetics, retained austenite fraction prediction, and the carbon-hardness relationship in martensitic tool steels.
Tm
Tempering of Steel
Four stages of tempering, secondary hardening mechanism, temper embrittlement, and the temperature-time-hardness relationships in tool and high-speed steels.
HV
Hardness Testing Methods
Rockwell C (HRC), Vickers (HV), and microhardness testing for tool steels: scale ranges, conversion, and production quality control after vacuum hardening.
Fe-C
Iron–Carbon Phase Diagram
Phase diagram context for understanding carbide dissolution during austenitising, the effect of alloy additions on phase boundaries, and the thermodynamic basis of tool steel hardening.
SB
Salt Bath Heat Treatment
Comparison process: neutral salt quenching, austempering, and martempering — when salt bath processing is preferred over vacuum HPGQ for tool steel hardening.
D
Case Depth Diffusion Calculator
Fick’s law calculator for case depth prediction in carburising and nitriding — complementary surface hardening processes to through-hardening of tool steels.
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