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Vacuum Furnace Technology

Editor’s Note: This article previously appeared in the December 2022 issue of Heat Treat Today. Permission to reprint granted by Heat Treat Today, www.heattreattoday.com.

Vacuum furnaces are widely used in the aerospace and automotive industries. These furnaces are used for multiple processes including brazing, aging, and solution heat treating for countless materials. Typically, vacuum furnaces are utilized to ensure a lack of oxidation/contamination during heat treatment. This article will talk about the origins, theory, and main parts of vacuum technology and how it is used in both aerospace and automotive industries.

Posted: August 28, 2023

Vacuum levels corresponding to the recommendations of the American Vacuum Society Standards Committee.
Vacuum pumps work in conjunction with one another.
Booster pump positions.
Diffusion Pump.
Diagram of gas quenching.
Holding Pump.
Insulated
Radiation
Table 3.
Table 1.
Table 2.
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A Brief History 

Vacuum furnaces began to be used in the 1930s for annealing and melting titanium sponge materials. Early vacuum furnaces were hot wall vacuum furnaces, not cold wall vacuum furnaces like we use today. Additionally, most early vacuum furnaces did not utilize diffusion pumps.  

Vacuum Heat Treat Theory 

Vacuum technology includes vacuum pumping systems which enable the vessel to be pulled down to different stages through the process. Degrees of vacuum level are expressed opposite of pressure levels: high vacuum means low pressure. In common usage, the levels shown below in Figure 1 correspond to the recommendations of the American Vacuum Society Standards Committee. 

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Vacuum levels corresponding to the recommendations of the American Vacuum Society Standards Committee.

Vacuum level will modify vapor pressure in a given material. The vapor pressure of a material is that pressure exerted at a given temperature when a material is in equilibrium with its own vapor. Vapor pressure is a function of both the material and the temperature. Chromium, at 760 torr, has a vapor pressure of ~4,031°F. At 10¯5, the vapor pressure is ~2,201°F. This may cause potential process challenges when processing certain materials in the furnace. As an example, consider a 4-point temperature uniformity survey processed at 1000°F, 1500°F, 1800°F, and 2250°F. This type of TUS will typically take 6-8 hours and, as the furnace heats up through the test temperatures, vacuum readings will most likely increase to a greater vacuum level. If expendable Type K thermocouples are used, there is a fair chance that, at high readings, you may begin to have test thermocouple failure due to vapor pressure.  

Vacuum Furnace Pumping System 

Vacuum heat treating is designed to eliminate contact between the product being heat treated and oxidizing elements. This is achieved through the elimination of an atmosphere as the vacuum pumps engage and pulls a vacuum on the vessel. Vacuum furnaces have several stages to the pumping system that must work in sequence to achieve the desired vacuum level. In this section we will examine those states as well as potential troubleshooting methods to identify when one or more of those stages contributes to failure in the system. 

Vacuum furnaces have several stages to the pumping system that must work in sequence to achieve the desired vacuum level. Each pump within the system has the capability to pull different vacuum levels. These pumps work in conjunction with each other (see Figure 2). 

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Vacuum pumps work in conjunction with one another.

The mechanical pump is the initial stage of vacuum. This pump may pull from 105 to 10. At pressures below 20 torr the efficiency of a mechanical pump begins to decline. This is when the booster pump is initiated.  

The booster pump has two double-lobe impellers mounted on parallel shafts which rotate in opposite directions (see Figure 3).  

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Booster pump positions.

 

The diffusion pump (Figure 4) is activated into the pumping system between 10 and 1 microns. The diffusion pump allows the system to pump down to high vacuum and lower. The diffusion pump has no moving parts.  

The pump works based on the vaporization of the oil, condensation as it falls, and the trapping and extraction of gas molecules through the pumping system. 

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Diffusion Pump.

 

The holding pump (Image 1) creates greater pressure within the fore-line to ensure that, when the crossover valve between the mechanical and diffusion pump is activated, the oil within the diffusion pump will not escape into the vessel. 

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Holding Pump.

 

Vacuum Furnace Hot Zone Design 

The hot zone within a vacuum furnace is where the heating takes place. The hot zone is simply an insulated chamber that is suspended away from the inner cold wall. Vacuum itself is a good insulator so the space between the cold wall and hot zone ensures the flow of heat from the inside to the outside of the furnace can be reduced. There are two types of vacuum furnace hot zones used: insulated (Image 2) and radiation style (Image 3).  

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Table 3.
Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Table 2.

 

The two most common heat shielding materials are molybdenum and graphite. Both have advantages and disadvantages. Below is a comparison (Tables 1 and 2).  

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Table 1.
Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Table 2.

Vacuum Furnace Quenching System 

Quenching is defined as the rapid cooling of a metal to obtain desired properties. Different alloys may require different quenching rates to achieve the properties required. Vacuum furnaces use inert gas to quench when quenching is required. As the gas passes over the load, it absorbs the heat which then exits the chamber and travels through quenching piping which cools the gas. The cooled gas is then drawn back into the chamber to repeat the process (see Figure 5).  

Conrad Kacsik Instrument Systems,vacuum furnace technology
Diagram of gas quenching.

Vacuum Furnace Trouble Shooting 

Below in Table 3 are some helpful suggestions with regard to problems processors may have.  

Insert: Table 3 

Summary 

Vacuum furnaces are an essential piece of equipment when materials need to be kept free of contamination. However, there are times when this equipment may not be necessary, and is therefore considered cost prohibitive, although this is something each processor must research. This article is meant to merely touch on vacuum technology and its uses. For additional and more in-depth information regarding vacuum furnaces, I recommend a technical book called Steel Heat Treatment, edited by George E. Totten.  

www.kacsik.com

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