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uithardings

Uithardings is a Dutch term used in metallurgy to describe processes that increase the hardness of metals, typically through heat treatment or plastic deformation. It covers both bulk hardening that changes the overall microstructure and surface hardening that produces a hard exterior while preserving a tougher interior. In English, the term is commonly rendered as hardening or heat treatment, with specific methods such as quenching, tempering, case hardening, and surface hardening.

Bulk hardening involves heating an alloy to a temperature that forms austenite, then quenching rapidly to create

Surface hardening creates a hard outer layer while leaving the core softer. Techniques include carburizing or

Common applications are tools, gears, bearings, cutting surfaces, automotive parts, and structural components where wear resistance

a
hard
martensitic
structure.
Tempering
follows
to
adjust
hardness
and
toughness.
Quench
media
may
include
oil,
water,
or
polymer
solutions,
and
controlling
cooling
rate
is
important
to
minimize
distortion
and
residual
stresses.
carbonitriding
(case
hardening),
nitriding,
induction
hardening,
flame
hardening,
and
laser
or
electron
beam
surface
treatments.
These
raise
surface
hardness
and
wear
resistance
without
a
large
change
to
bulk
properties.
Work
hardening,
produced
by
plastic
deformation,
also
increases
hardness
in
certain
metals
such
as
copper
and
aluminum
alloys.
or
strength
is
needed.
Limitations
include
potential
distortion,
cracking,
and
excessive
brittleness
if
treatments
are
not
properly
controlled.
Hardness
is
usually
measured
by
Rockwell
or
Vickers
tests
and
correlated
with
wear
performance.