Process for shrink-fit locking a cylindrical ceramic part into a flange made of a ferrous material, and ceramic-metal composite bodies
US4759110A · kind A · utility
Assignee
Inventors
Key dates
| Filing date | Apr 7, 1986 |
| Grant date | Jul 26, 1988 |
| Priority date | — |
| Expiry date | Apr 7, 2006 |
Classification
- Technology area (CPC Y)Emerging Cross-Sectional Technologies
- CPC primaryY10T403/48
- WIPO fieldMachine tools
- WIPO sectorMechanical engineering
Abstract
The tensile loading of a ceramic-metal joint, made by shrink-fit locking a cylindrical ceramic component into a flange of ferrous material in the axial direction of the ceramic component can be improved by undersizing the diameter D of the bore of the flange by 13-27 .mu.m making it, at room temperature, this much smaller than the diameter d of that part of the ceramic component to be attached to the flange by shrink-fit locking, by preparing the cylindrical surface of the said part of the ceramic component with a surface roughness Ra of 0.05-0.2 .mu.m and the surface of the bore in the flange with a roughness Ra of 0.4-0.8 .rho.m, and by heating the flange, before fitting it to the ceramic part, to a temperature such that, after fitting together the ceramic component and the flange, the resultant stresses produced on cooling the assembly to room temperature are below the yield strength R.sub.po.2 of the ferrous material, and the said temperature of heating is below the Wohler temperature of the ceramic material.
Source: USPTO / EPO open patent data. Objective bibliographic and citation counts.