Abstract
The components made of cast irons require protection against wear in severe service conditions. Surface engineering can be used to prevent mechanical failures of cast iron components due to excessive friction-related wear. The iron boride-based coatings can be applied on the entire working surfaces of large-size complex shape cast iron components through the thermal diffusion process. Tribological properties of these coatings obtained have been studied using the pin-on-disc test configuration in simulating application conditions. The obtained iron boride coatings demonstrated significantly lower wear losses compared to bare cast iron, stable behaviour of coefficient of friction during time and no structural degradation and spalling. The superior wear resistance of boride-based coatings on cast iron is dealt with the combination of their high hardness, specific ‘sawtooth’ double-layer morphology obtained through the thermal diffusion process, diffusion-related bonding to the substrate, self-lubricating thin ‘tribo-film’ formed during friction and high thermal and chemical stability.
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