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Material sheet

Diffusion-Alloyed Sintered Steels

Diffusion-alloyed steels are produced from steel powders in which the main alloying elements — nickel, copper and molybdenum — are diffused onto the surface of the particles. They offer a very attractive compromise between compressibility, mechanical strength, wear resistance and suitability for heat treatment.

Applications

An industrial solution for structural parts

Diffusion-alloyed steels are used for medium to high-strength parts, when higher mechanical performance than a standard grade is required while maintaining good compacting capability and suitability for mass production.

  • Medium to high-strength structural parts
  • Gears, cams, hubs, levers and transmission components
  • Parts requiring strength, hardness and wear resistance
  • Applications that may benefit from additional heat treatment
Key points

A compromise between compactability and performance

Unlike fully prealloyed powders, diffusion-alloyed powders retain good compacting behavior while providing significant metallurgical strengthening. They produce a deliberately heterogeneous microstructure, favorable to certain combinations of strength, toughness and wear resistance.

Compaction Good pressing capability.
Performance High strength and wear resistance.
Economy Compromise between cost, density and strength.

Application areas

This overview summarizes the typical applications of diffusion-alloyed steels, with a focus on mechanical performance, industrial suitability and manufacturing cost.

Family Typical applications Main advantage
Low-carbon diffusion-alloyed steel Supports, hubs, structural parts, standard mechanical components Good compromise between density, strength and pressing capability
Higher-carbon diffusion-alloyed steel Gears, cams, levers, parts subjected to load or friction Higher strength and hardness with improved wear resistance
Heat-treated diffusion-alloyed steel Loaded parts, transmission systems, functionally critical mechanical components Major increase in strength and hardness after treatment
Ni / Mo reinforced diffusion-alloyed steel Compact technical parts, demanding structural applications High performance while maintaining industrial pressing efficiency

Indicative mechanical properties

The ranges below summarize typical values for diffusion-alloyed steels in SI units. They are intended to frame the preliminary design phase; final selection depends on density, carbon content, heat treatment and manufacturing constraints.

Material family Typical density Apparent hardness Tensile strength
Ni-Cu-Mo diffusion-alloyed steel 6.75 – 7.15 g/cm³ 72 – 80 HRB 470 – 610 MPa
Heat-treated diffusion-alloyed steel 6.75 – 7.15 g/cm³ 28 – 38 HRC 720 – 1030 MPa
High-strength diffusion-alloyed steel 6.75 – 7.35 g/cm³ 80 – 91 HRB 590 – 850 MPa
Heat-treated HT diffusion-alloyed steel 6.75 – 7.35 g/cm³ 30 – 42 HRC 760 – 1140 MPa

Economic approach to material selection

These grades are particularly useful when performance must be increased without losing the industrial advantage of powder compaction. They should be selected when the functional gain justifies the material cost and any additional treatments.

Industrial requirement Material orientation Compromise to monitor
Improve an iron-copper or iron-nickel grade Sintered Ni-Cu-Mo diffusion-alloyed steel Good mechanical improvement, but density and material cost must be monitored
Achieve high strength after heat treatment Heat-treated diffusion-alloyed steel High performance requiring controlled processing and heat treatment
Maintain good compacting capability Diffusion-alloyed grade rather than fully prealloyed steel Favorable compromise, but with a more heterogeneous microstructure
Technical mass-produced part Diffusion-alloyed steel selected according to load and density Optimization required between performance, cost, wear and production repeatability

Design considerations

For diffusion-alloyed steels, the selection must consider final density, carbon content, the presence of nickel, copper and molybdenum, as well as the selected heat treatment. The heterogeneous microstructure is part of the normal behavior of this family.

This solution is particularly relevant when the objective is to increase strength, hardness or wear resistance while maintaining a competitive sintered production approach.

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