| Latest special issue of a scientific paper from Antriebstechnik 9/2000 | |||
| For many ferrous products
that need a hard or low-wearing surface, hardening only the top surface
layers proves an adequate measure. Martensite surface hardening considerably
increases the surface hardness of steels. This paper presents the methods
that have been established and optimized over many years in flame and induction
hardening.
[ 5 pages, 440
[ 9 pages, 480
The author Dr.-Ing. G Liebmann was born in 1932 and studied materials engineering as an external student at the Bergakademie Freiburg. In 1979 he received his doctorate at the same institute. Until 1991 he worked as a research assistant at the material laboratories of VEB Carl Zeiss Jena (now Jenoptik GmbH) where he ran the department for heat treatment. At the end of 1991 he assumed the post of head engineer at Härterei Reese Weimar GmbH & Co. KG, where he has been entrusted with confidential duties since 1992. In 1996 he was elected to the managing board of AWT. |
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