US3010856A - Method of making an abradant element for spark generating device - Google Patents

Method of making an abradant element for spark generating device Download PDF

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US3010856A
US3010856A US657917A US65791757A US3010856A US 3010856 A US3010856 A US 3010856A US 657917 A US657917 A US 657917A US 65791757 A US65791757 A US 65791757A US 3010856 A US3010856 A US 3010856A
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spark
abradant
wheel
pack
generating device
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Richard P Seelig
Richard L Wachtell
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Chromalloy Corp
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Chromalloy Corp
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C23COATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; CHEMICAL SURFACE TREATMENT; DIFFUSION TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL; INHIBITING CORROSION OF METALLIC MATERIAL OR INCRUSTATION IN GENERAL
    • C23CCOATING METALLIC MATERIAL; COATING MATERIAL WITH METALLIC MATERIAL; SURFACE TREATMENT OF METALLIC MATERIAL BY DIFFUSION INTO THE SURFACE, BY CHEMICAL CONVERSION OR SUBSTITUTION; COATING BY VACUUM EVAPORATION, BY SPUTTERING, BY ION IMPLANTATION OR BY CHEMICAL VAPOUR DEPOSITION, IN GENERAL
    • C23C12/00Solid state diffusion of at least one non-metal element other than silicon and at least one metal element or silicon into metallic material surfaces
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F16ENGINEERING ELEMENTS AND UNITS; GENERAL MEASURES FOR PRODUCING AND MAINTAINING EFFECTIVE FUNCTIONING OF MACHINES OR INSTALLATIONS; THERMAL INSULATION IN GENERAL
    • F16DCOUPLINGS FOR TRANSMITTING ROTATION; CLUTCHES; BRAKES
    • F16D69/00Friction linings; Attachment thereof; Selection of coacting friction substances or surfaces
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23QIGNITION; EXTINGUISHING-DEVICES
    • F23Q2/00Lighters containing fuel, e.g. for cigarettes
    • F23Q2/34Component parts or accessories
    • F23Q2/46Friction wheels; Arrangement of friction wheels
    • FMECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
    • F23COMBUSTION APPARATUS; COMBUSTION PROCESSES
    • F23QIGNITION; EXTINGUISHING-DEVICES
    • F23Q2/00Lighters containing fuel, e.g. for cigarettes
    • F23Q2/34Component parts or accessories
    • F23Q2/48Flint; Guides for, or arrangements of, flints

Definitions

  • This invention relates to mechanical spark-generating devices.
  • Such devices commonly comprise a ferrous metal abradant element having a roughened surface and an element made of a pyrophoric material, commonly called a flint.
  • the elements are rubbed against one another to cause the rough surface of the abradant element to remove from the pyrophoric element particles of the pyrophoric material that ignite spontaneously in air to form a spark which can in turn be used to ignite a gaseous or liquid fuel.
  • a typical example of such a spark-generating device is the conventional cigarette lighter wherein aferrous metal spark wheel having a serrated peripheral surface is positioned in contact with one end of a tubular pyrophoric element, and the pyrophoric element is held against the periphery of the spark wheel under light spring pressure.
  • the spark wheel is either manually or mechanically rotated to produce, by its abrasive action on the pyrophoric element, a spark for igniting the fuel of a fuelsaturated wick located adjacent to the spark generating device.
  • Such a spark-generating device is the gas lighter which at one time was widely used for igniting the gas of gas-burning domestic cooking stoves and is still extensively used as a gas igniter.
  • gas lighters comprise an abradant plate or cylinder against which a spring-mounted pyrophoric element bears in such manner that the pyrophoric element can be drawn across the abradant plate to produce the desired gas-igniting spark.
  • the present invention is particularly .concerned with the abradant element of such a spark-generating device and it is a general object of the invention to provide an abradant element of this character whichhas a longer useful life and greater reliability than the abradant elements heretofore available foruse in spark-generating devices.
  • the invention will be described herein as applied to the spark wheel of a cigarette lighter, although as the description proceeds it will be apparent that the invention can equally well be embodied in abradant elements having other geometrical configurations and used for other purposes.
  • the objects of the invention can be achievedin general by formingon a spark-wheel of conventional configuration ,a hardened surface layer essentially composed of chromium carbide. It has been found that when such a chromium carbide layer is properly formed at the abradant surface of the spark wheelas described more particularly hereafter a product havinggreatly improved durability is achieved.
  • the atmospheric temperature hardness is relatively high, i.e. of the-order of 1800 to 2200 on the Vickers scale, and nosignificant softening of the surface material occurs at temperatures as high as 1800 to 2000" F.
  • thehardness of the material is such that even when the abradant projections on the periphery of the wheel are overstressed, the wheel remains functionally effective.
  • the spark wheels embodying the present invention have a useful life, in terms of the number of spark generating operations they can perform .before becoming ineffective, of the order offour times that of the spark wheels previously available.
  • FIGURE 1 is a side elevation, partly broken away, of the upper portion of a cigarette lighter illustrating the spark wheel, flint and wick assembly thereof, 4
  • FIGURE 2 is a right-end view of the structure of FIGURE 1,
  • FIGURE 3 is a greatly enlarged section through the abradant surface of the ,spark wheel taken on the line 3-3 of FIGURE Zand illustrating the hardened layer at the operatingsurface of the spark wheel, and
  • FIGURE 4 is a vertical longitudinal section through a retort adapted to be used in carrying out certain steps of the method of the invention
  • a portion of a conventional cigarette lighter is illustrated therein comprising a body or fuel receptacle 10 having a spark wheel-12 rotatably mounted thereon.
  • a tube 14 for-med in the body 10 there is a tube 14 in which a rod-shaped pyrophoric element such as the conventional flint 16 is slidable.
  • the element 16 is urged by a spring 18 toward the abradant surface 20 of spark wheel 12, -Surfaoe-20 is provided with ridges, teeth or other serrations of any suitable and well-known type.
  • a fuel-saturated wick 22 is positioned near the spark wheel. Rotation ofthe spark wheel 12 in contact with element 16 generates a spark which ignites the fuelsaturated Wick in known manner.
  • spark wheel blanks having the desired ridges or other serrations in the periphery thereof are formed from a suitable ferrous metal core which may be either a high carbon or low carbon steel. Since the desired serrations at the periphery of the blank can be more readily and economically formed if a low carbon steel is used, we prefer, to use a relatively mild steel having a carbon content of less than say 0.7% by weight forthis purpose.
  • ferrous spark wheel blanks made of such a mild steel are first subjected to a carburizing treatment to increase substantially the carbon content at the surface of the wheel.
  • Carburization of the spark wheel blanks is eifected by embedding them in a pack composed of a suitable comminuted carbnrizing medium in a container and introducing the container into a furnace which is maintained at a temperature of 1700 F. to 1900 F. for a period of 4 to hours.
  • Any of various commercially available carburizing media may be used.
  • Such carburizing media commonly comprise a mixture of carbon and various carbonates. The time and temperature may be varied according to the degree of carburization desired.
  • the carburizing treatment is preferably carried out in such manner that the carbon content of the surface of the spark wheel blank is increased to say'0.8% to 3% by weight to a depth of at least M
  • Carburization of the spark wheels may also be effected by gas carburization.
  • Chromizing is desirably effected by embedding the blanks in a suitable chromizing pack and heating them therein to an elevated temperature.
  • the chromizing pack may comprise for example a finely divided mixture of ferrochrome and a filler such as kaolin, either calcined or uncalcined, or alumina, together with a small amount of ammonium iodide.
  • Heating of the spark wheel blanks in the chromizing pack is carried out at a temperature and for a period of time sufficient to provide a hardened chromium carbide casing at least 0.00075 thick at the surface of the wheel.
  • the desired chromium-containing hardened casing can be achieved by using essentially the same heating schedule as in the carburizing step, i.e. 1700 to 1900 F. for a period of 4 to 10 hours.
  • FIGURE 3 of the drawings is a section through two of the teeth or ridges of the abradant surface 20 of spark wheel 12.
  • the hardened casing is essentially bi -laminar and comprises the outer layer 50 and inner layer 52 at the surface of the ferrous metal spark wheel core 54.
  • the outer layer 50 is relatively high in chromium content and is composed almost entirely of chrocarbide having substantially the formula Cr C.
  • the inner layer 52 contains a certain amount of iron in combination with chromium and carbon and appears to be essentially a mixture of chromium carbide having substantially the formula CD103 and an iron chromium carbide, probably (CIFe)qC As indicated above the outer chromium carbide layer 50 has a Vickers hardness of about 1800 to 2200.
  • the spark wheel blanks 24, made of steel having less than 0.7% carbon are strung on a rod or wire 26 and packed in the comminuted carburizing medium 28, which may be the medium sold commercially under the trade name Pear-lite, in the container 30.
  • a loosely fitting cover 32 is placed on top of the pack and a layer of a suitable sealing medium 34 in then spread on top of cover 32.
  • the sealing medium can be a finely divided silicate which softens to form a gas impervious seal at a temperature of the order of 1400" F.
  • the container 30 is placed in a tray 36 and an outer cover 38 is then positioned over the container. As illustrated the side walls of outer cover 38 are positioned between container 30 and the walls of tray 36.
  • a sealing material 40 which may be the same as the sealing material 34 is positioned adjacent to the lower rim of cover 38 to provide a second seal.
  • the assembled'tray and container are then introduced into a furnace in which they are heated to about 1900 F.
  • the chromizing of the spark wheel blanks may be carried out in the same type of retort as that described above, but with a difierent pack composition.
  • the chromizing pack of the present example comprises about 35% by Weight of alumina, about 65% by weight of ferrochrome having a chromium content of about 65 and about 0.25% of ammonium iodide. All components of the pack have a particle size less than 100 mesh. 'Ihe retort containing the chromizing pack with the spark wheels embedded therein is heated at about 1880 F. for a period of 6 hours.
  • the ammonium iodide decomposes to form ammonia and elemental iodine, and at a somewhat higher temperature the ammonia decomposes to form nitrogen and hydrogen.
  • a portion of the generated gases flow out through the seals 34 and 40, thereby sweeping out any atmospheric oxygen present in the pack.
  • the hydrogen formed by decomposition of the ammonia provides a'reducing atmosphere and reacts with any oxide coating that may be present on the spark wheels.
  • the iodine reacts with the chromium of the pack to form a volatile iodide from which chromium is deposited on the spark wheel surfaces.
  • the deposited chromium diffuses into the spark wheel blanks to form the bi-laminar hardened casing described above.
  • spark wheels comprise a ferrous metal core having a serrated abradant peripheral surface provided with a bi-laminar hardened casing, the outer layer of which is a very hard coating of chromium carbide.
  • the present invention provides an abradant element for a spark-generating device and a method of making the same that are capable of achieving the several objects set forth at the beginning of the present specification.
  • the exceptionally hard chromium carbide coating substantially'increases the useful life of the abradant element.
  • the nature of the casing or coating is such that if the abradant serrations are over-stressed they break off to leave a jagged surface that is still abradant.
  • the method of making a spark wheel adapted to be used in the spark-generating assembly of a cigarette lighter which comprises, forming from steel having a carbon content less than 0.7% by weight a cylindrical blank having a serrated abradant cylindrical surface with the outer edges of the serrations being sharp, carburizing said abradant surface to increase the carbon content of the peripheral area of said wheel to a depth of at least to an average carbon content of 0.8% to 3% by Weight, and thereafter pack chromizing said carburized surface of said wheel to provide a layer of chromium carbide at the abradant peripheral surface thereof having a thickness of at least 0.00075 while maintaining the sharpness of said sharp edges of said serrations.
  • the method of making a spark wheel adapted to be used in the spark-generating assembly of a cigarette lighter which comprises, forming from steel having a carbon content less than 0.7% by weight a spark wheel blank having a serrated abradant peripheral surface, embedding said blank in a comminuted carburizing medium, heating the blank in said carburizing medium to a temperature of 1700 to 1900 F.
  • a chromizing pack essentially composed of a mixture of finely divided ferrochrome and alumina and a small amount of ammonium iodide, and heating said spark wheel blank in said chromizing pack to a temperature of 1700" to 1900 F. for a period of four to ten hours to form at the peripheral portion thereof a hardened bi-laminar casing having a thickness of at least 0.00075" and composed largely of chromium carbide.
  • a method for the manufacture of an article having a serrated surface the steps which comprise forming from steel a blank of said article having said serrated surface, carburizing said serrated surface of said blank for the hardening and strengthening thereof, and thereafter chromizing said carburized surfaces of said steel blank by heating said blank embedded in a chromizing pack comprising a source of chromium and finely divided refractory filler and a source of volatile halogen for diffusion coating of said chromium into said carburized surface of said blank to form an outer diffusion coated layer comprising chromium carbide on said serrated surface of said article.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
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Description

Nov. 28, 1961 R. P. SEELIG EIAL METHOD OF MAKING AN ABRADANT ELEMENT FOR SPARK GENERATING DEVICE Filed May 8, 1957 INVENTOR5 Ava/MP0 5592/ FIG.
Fa/7%,?) L. WAC/HELL Mir, Hm: HZM.
ATTORNEYS METHOD OF MAKING AN ABRADANT ELEMENT FOR SPARK GENERATING DEVICE Richard P. Seelig, Hartsdale, and Richard L. Wachtell, Larchrnont, N.Y., assignors to Chromalloy Corporation, White Plains, N.Y.
Filed May 8,1957, Ser. No. 657,917 4 Claims. (Cl. 1486) This invention relates to mechanical spark-generating devices. Such devices commonly comprise a ferrous metal abradant element having a roughened surface and an element made of a pyrophoric material, commonly called a flint. The elements are rubbed against one another to cause the rough surface of the abradant element to remove from the pyrophoric element particles of the pyrophoric material that ignite spontaneously in air to form a spark which can in turn be used to ignite a gaseous or liquid fuel.
A typical example of such a spark-generating device is the conventional cigarette lighter wherein aferrous metal spark wheel having a serrated peripheral surface is positioned in contact with one end of a tubular pyrophoric element, and the pyrophoric element is held against the periphery of the spark wheel under light spring pressure. In use the spark wheel is either manually or mechanically rotated to produce, by its abrasive action on the pyrophoric element, a spark for igniting the fuel of a fuelsaturated wick located adjacent to the spark generating device.
Another example of such a spark-generating device is the gas lighter which at one time was widely used for igniting the gas of gas-burning domestic cooking stoves and is still extensively used as a gas igniter. Such gas lighters comprise an abradant plate or cylinder against which a spring-mounted pyrophoric element bears in such manner that the pyrophoric element can be drawn across the abradant plate to produce the desired gas-igniting spark.
The present invention is particularly .concerned with the abradant element of such a spark-generating device and it is a general object of the invention to provide an abradant element of this character whichhas a longer useful life and greater reliability than the abradant elements heretofore available foruse in spark-generating devices. For convenience the invention will be described herein as applied to the spark wheel of a cigarette lighter, although as the description proceeds it will be apparent that the invention can equally well be embodied in abradant elements having other geometrical configurations and used for other purposes.
Known types of ferrous metal spark wheels with abradant teeth or ridges formed in the periphery thereof have heretofore been made from high carbon-steels, i.e. steels having a carbon content of 0.95 to 1.25% by weight carbon, as well as from low carbon steels with subsequent surface hardening of the abradant surface of the wheel by a variety of known techniques. In spite-of these prior efforts to produce a durable product, the spark wheels previously available have had a relatively limited useful life. Rotation of such a spark wheel against the pyrophoric element tends to dull, bend or otherwise deform the cutting or abrading edges or ridges of the periphery of the wheel, thus effectively destroying the utility of the lighter in which the wheel is mountedafter say 5,000-10,000 operations. Our studies indicate that the limited useful life of such spark wheels is due in large measure to the fact that the materials used in their manufacture, while relatively hard at atmospheric temperatures, have not had a sufiiciently high softening temperature. In operation, the abradant surface of the wheel is subjected to localized heat and pressure which soften 2 the material of the cutting edges or-ridges, thuscausing them to be bent, blunted or otherwise deformed in such manner that they functionrinefliciently or inetfeetively.
It is accordingly an object of the present invention to provide an abradant element for a spark-generating device -having improved durability. It is another object of the invention ,to provide an abradant element such as a spark wheelhaving an abradant surface which is harder and retains its hardness at higher. temperatures than the abradant surfaces of abradant elements heretofore used.- It is still another object of the invention to provide an improved method of making such an abradant element.
Other objectsof the. invention will be in part obvious andin part pointedout hereafter.
The objects of the invention can be achievedin general by formingon a spark-wheel of conventional configuration ,a hardened surface layer essentially composed of chromium carbide. It has been found that when such a chromium carbide layer is properly formed at the abradant surface of the spark wheelas described more particularly hereafter a product havinggreatly improved durability is achieved. The atmospheric temperature hardness is relatively high, i.e. of the-order of 1800 to 2200 on the Vickers scale, and nosignificant softening of the surface material occurs at temperatures as high as 1800 to 2000" F. Moreover thehardness of the material is such that even when the abradant projections on the periphery of the wheel are overstressed, the wheel remains functionally effective. Thus if the localized pressure on a peripheral ridge or tooth of the wheel exceeds that which the ridge can sustain, the ridge does not bend or deform plasticly but rather a small piece breaks olf along a jagged fracture line to leave asurface that is still abradant. It has been found that the spark wheels embodying the present invention have a useful life, in terms of the number of spark generating operations they can perform .before becoming ineffective, of the order offour times that of the spark wheels previously available.
In order to point out more fully the nature of the present invention reference will now be made to the accompanying drawing which illustrates a spark wheel embodying the present invention and an, apparatus which is useful in carrying out the method of the invention.
In the drawings:
, FIGURE 1 is a side elevation, partly broken away, of the upper portion of a cigarette lighter illustrating the spark wheel, flint and wick assembly thereof, 4
FIGURE 2 is a right-end view of the structure of FIGURE 1,
FIGURE 3 is a greatly enlarged section through the abradant surface of the ,spark wheel taken on the line 3-3 of FIGURE Zand illustrating the hardened layer at the operatingsurface of the spark wheel, and
FIGURE 4 is a vertical longitudinal section through a retort adapted to be used in carrying out certain steps of the method of the invention,
Referring to the drawing and more particularly to FIGURES 1 and 2, a portion of a conventional cigarette lighter is illustrated therein comprising a body or fuel receptacle 10 having a spark wheel-12 rotatably mounted thereon. For-med in the body 10 there is a tube 14 in which a rod-shaped pyrophoric element such as the conventional flint 16 is slidable. The element 16 is urged by a spring 18 toward the abradant surface 20 of spark wheel 12, -Surfaoe-20 is provided with ridges, teeth or other serrations of any suitable and well-known type. A fuel-saturated wick 22 is positioned near the spark wheel. Rotation ofthe spark wheel 12 in contact with element 16 generates a spark which ignites the fuelsaturated Wick in known manner.
In producing spark wheels of the type disclosed and claimed herein, spark wheel blanks having the desired ridges or other serrations in the periphery thereof are formed from a suitable ferrous metal core which may be either a high carbon or low carbon steel. Since the desired serrations at the periphery of the blank can be more readily and economically formed if a low carbon steel is used, we prefer, to use a relatively mild steel having a carbon content of less than say 0.7% by weight forthis purpose.
In accordance with a preferred embodiment of the method of the present invention, ferrous spark wheel blanks made of such a mild steel are first subjected to a carburizing treatment to increase substantially the carbon content at the surface of the wheel. Carburization of the spark wheel blanks is eifected by embedding them in a pack composed of a suitable comminuted carbnrizing medium in a container and introducing the container into a furnace which is maintained at a temperature of 1700 F. to 1900 F. for a period of 4 to hours. Any of various commercially available carburizing media may be used. Such carburizing media commonly comprise a mixture of carbon and various carbonates. The time and temperature may be varied according to the degree of carburization desired. In general the carburizing treatment is preferably carried out in such manner that the carbon content of the surface of the spark wheel blank is increased to say'0.8% to 3% by weight to a depth of at least M Carburization of the spark wheels may also be effected by gas carburization.
After carburization the spark wheel blanks are removed from the carburizing medium and then subjected to a chromizing treatment. Chromizing is desirably effected by embedding the blanks in a suitable chromizing pack and heating them therein to an elevated temperature. The chromizing pack may comprise for example a finely divided mixture of ferrochrome and a filler such as kaolin, either calcined or uncalcined, or alumina, together with a small amount of ammonium iodide. Heating of the spark wheel blanks in the chromizing pack is carried out at a temperature and for a period of time sufficient to provide a hardened chromium carbide casing at least 0.00075 thick at the surface of the wheel. The desired chromium-containing hardened casing can be achieved by using essentially the same heating schedule as in the carburizing step, i.e. 1700 to 1900 F. for a period of 4 to 10 hours.
The nature of the hardened casing thusobtained is illustrated in FIGURE 3 of the drawings which is a section through two of the teeth or ridges of the abradant surface 20 of spark wheel 12. Referring to FIGURE 3, it will be noted that the hardened casing is essentially bi -laminar and comprises the outer layer 50 and inner layer 52 at the surface of the ferrous metal spark wheel core 54. The outer layer 50 is relatively high in chromium content and is composed almost entirely of chrocarbide having substantially the formula Cr C. The inner layer 52 contains a certain amount of iron in combination with chromium and carbon and appears to be essentially a mixture of chromium carbide having substantially the formula CD103 and an iron chromium carbide, probably (CIFe)qC As indicated above the outer chromium carbide layer 50 has a Vickers hardness of about 1800 to 2200.
In order to illustrate further the method of the present invention the 'following specific example is given of a preferred procedure for making spark wheels embodying the invention. Referring particularly to FIGURE 4 of the drawings, the spark wheel blanks 24, made of steel having less than 0.7% carbon, are strung on a rod or wire 26 and packed in the comminuted carburizing medium 28, which may be the medium sold commercially under the trade name Pear-lite, in the container 30.
After the spark wheel blanks 24 have been packed in the carburizing medium in the container 30 a loosely fitting cover 32 is placed on top of the pack and a layer of a suitable sealing medium 34 in then spread on top of cover 32. The sealing medium can be a finely divided silicate which softens to form a gas impervious seal at a temperature of the order of 1400" F. The container 30 is placed in a tray 36 and an outer cover 38 is then positioned over the container. As illustrated the side walls of outer cover 38 are positioned between container 30 and the walls of tray 36. A sealing material 40 which may be the same as the sealing material 34 is positioned adjacent to the lower rim of cover 38 to provide a second seal.
The assembled'tray and container are then introduced into a furnace in which they are heated to about 1900 F.
for about 6 hours. During the early stages of the heating cycles gases are evolved from the carburizing material 28 that pass through the seals. 34 and 40 to the atmosphere. 'Ihese evolved gases sweep out any atmospheric oxygen that may have been retained in the pack 28. As the temperature rises the seals 34 and 40 melt but still permit passage of gas therethrough. At the end of the heating cycle the tray 36 is removed from the furnace and allowed to cool. During cooling the seals 34 and 40 solidify to prevent atmospheric oxygen from entering the pack 28 and reaching the treated spark wheel blanks during the cooling period, thereby preventing oxidation of the surfaces of the blanks during this period. The average carbon content of the surface portion of the spark wheel blanks to a depth of ,5 at the end of this carburizing treatment is about 1.5% by weight.
7. When the carburizing treatment has been completed the spark wheels are removed from the carburizing pack and then submitted to a chromizing treatment. The chromizing of the spark wheel blanks may be carried out in the same type of retort as that described above, but with a difierent pack composition. The chromizing pack of the present example comprises about 35% by Weight of alumina, about 65% by weight of ferrochrome having a chromium content of about 65 and about 0.25% of ammonium iodide. All components of the pack have a particle size less than 100 mesh. 'Ihe retort containing the chromizing pack with the spark wheels embedded therein is heated at about 1880 F. for a period of 6 hours. As the pack is heated up the ammonium iodide decomposes to form ammonia and elemental iodine, and at a somewhat higher temperature the ammonia decomposes to form nitrogen and hydrogen. A portion of the generated gases flow out through the seals 34 and 40, thereby sweeping out any atmospheric oxygen present in the pack. The hydrogen formed by decomposition of the ammonia provides a'reducing atmosphere and reacts with any oxide coating that may be present on the spark wheels. As the temperature of the pack continues to rise, the iodine reacts with the chromium of the pack to form a volatile iodide from which chromium is deposited on the spark wheel surfaces. The deposited chromium diffuses into the spark wheel blanks to form the bi-laminar hardened casing described above.
At the end of the heating period the retort and pack are cooled and the spark wheels removed therefrom. The resulting spark wheels comprise a ferrous metal core having a serrated abradant peripheral surface provided with a bi-laminar hardened casing, the outer layer of which is a very hard coating of chromium carbide.
From the foregoing description it is apparent that the present invention provides an abradant element for a spark-generating device and a method of making the same that are capable of achieving the several objects set forth at the beginning of the present specification. The exceptionally hard chromium carbide coating substantially'increases the useful life of the abradant element. Moreover the nature of the casing or coating is such that if the abradant serrations are over-stressed they break off to leave a jagged surface that is still abradant.
It is of course to be understood that the foregoing description is illustrative only and that numerous changes can be made in the materials, conditions and proportions set forth without departing from the spirit of the inven tion as defined in the appended claims.
We claim:
1. The method of making an abradant element for a spark-generating device which comprises forming a ferrous metal blank having a serrated abradant surface having sharp points, carburizing said abradant surface to increase the carbon content of the portion of said blank adjacent to said surface, and thereafter pack chromizing said carburized abradant surface to form a hardened casing at said surface essentially composed of chromium carbide While maintaining the sharpness of said sharp points of said serrated surface.
2. The method of making a spark wheel adapted to be used in the spark-generating assembly of a cigarette lighter which comprises, forming from steel having a carbon content less than 0.7% by weight a cylindrical blank having a serrated abradant cylindrical surface with the outer edges of the serrations being sharp, carburizing said abradant surface to increase the carbon content of the peripheral area of said wheel to a depth of at least to an average carbon content of 0.8% to 3% by Weight, and thereafter pack chromizing said carburized surface of said wheel to provide a layer of chromium carbide at the abradant peripheral surface thereof having a thickness of at least 0.00075 while maintaining the sharpness of said sharp edges of said serrations.
3. The method of making a spark wheel adapted to be used in the spark-generating assembly of a cigarette lighter which comprises, forming from steel having a carbon content less than 0.7% by weight a spark wheel blank having a serrated abradant peripheral surface, embedding said blank in a comminuted carburizing medium, heating the blank in said carburizing medium to a temperature of 1700 to 1900 F. for a period of 4 to hours to increase the carbon content of the peripheral portion of said blank to 0.8% to 3% by weight to a depth of at least 4 removing said spark wheel blank from said carburizinlg medium and embedding it in a chromizing pack essentially composed of a mixture of finely divided ferrochrome and alumina and a small amount of ammonium iodide, and heating said spark wheel blank in said chromizing pack to a temperature of 1700" to 1900 F. for a period of four to ten hours to form at the peripheral portion thereof a hardened bi-laminar casing having a thickness of at least 0.00075" and composed largely of chromium carbide.
4. In a method for the manufacture of an article having a serrated surface, the steps which comprise forming from steel a blank of said article having said serrated surface, carburizing said serrated surface of said blank for the hardening and strengthening thereof, and thereafter chromizing said carburized surfaces of said steel blank by heating said blank embedded in a chromizing pack comprising a source of chromium and finely divided refractory filler and a source of volatile halogen for diffusion coating of said chromium into said carburized surface of said blank to form an outer diffusion coated layer comprising chromium carbide on said serrated surface of said article.
References Cited in the file of this patent UNITED STATES PATENTS 1,998,496 Fiedler Apr. 23, 1935 2,048,276 Marlies et al July 21, 1936 2,443,123 Solon June 8, 1948 2,804,412 Anderson Aug. 27, 1957 2,804,413 Essig et al. Aug. 27, 1957 OTHER REFERENCES Protective Coatings for Metals, by Burns et al., page 185, Reinhold Publishing Co., N.Y.C., 1939.
Merriman: A Dictionary of Metallurgy, 1958, published by Macdonald and Evans, Ltd., London, page 36.

Claims (1)

1. THE METHOD OF MAKING AN ABRADANT ELEMENT FOR A SPARK-GENERATING DEVICE WHICH COMPRISES FORMING A FERROUS METAL BLANK HAVING A SERRATED ABRADANT SURFACE HAVING SHARP POINTS, CARBURIZING SAID ABRADANT SURFACE TO INCREASE THE CARBON CONTENT OF THE PORTION OF SAID BLANK ADJACENT TO SAID SURFACE, AND THEREAFTER PACK CHROMIZING SAID CARBURIZED ABRADANT SURFACE TO FORM A HARDENED CASING AT SAID SURFACE ESSENTIALLY COMPOSED OF CHROMIUM CARBIDE WHILE MAINTAINING THE SHARPNESS OF SAID SHARP POINTS OF SAID SERRATED SURFACE.
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DEC16766A DE1226393B (en) 1957-05-08 1958-05-02 Method of making a friction element
GB14246/58A GB853276A (en) 1957-05-08 1958-05-05 Abradant element for spark-generating device and method of making same

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Cited By (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3262289A (en) * 1964-10-28 1966-07-26 Biesenbach Ginu Ignition spark wheels
US3263455A (en) * 1964-04-27 1966-08-02 Ronson Corp Lighter construction
US3282746A (en) * 1963-11-18 1966-11-01 Formsprag Co Method of hardening wear surfaces and product
US3314134A (en) * 1964-10-28 1967-04-18 Biesenbach Ginn Ignition spark wheels
US3910751A (en) * 1974-01-07 1975-10-07 Stephen P Chernock Spark wheels, method of manufacturing spark wheels, and dies for use therein
US5334263A (en) * 1991-12-05 1994-08-02 General Electric Company Substrate stabilization of diffusion aluminide coated nickel-based superalloys
US5997281A (en) * 1998-02-20 1999-12-07 Lei; Hou Chong Safety lighter

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1998496A (en) * 1929-04-09 1935-04-23 Fiedler Marcell Process of surface plating of metals with alloys
US2048276A (en) * 1932-04-21 1936-07-21 Bruno S Teschner Plated metal having carbide surface
US2443123A (en) * 1945-01-12 1948-06-08 Philip O Solon Cutting wheel for flint igniters
US2804412A (en) * 1955-12-22 1957-08-27 Gardner Denver Co Carburization of metal articles
US2804413A (en) * 1955-12-22 1957-08-27 Gardner Denver Co Carburization of metal articles

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Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2685543A (en) * 1951-01-17 1954-08-03 Wearex Corp Production of chromium carbide surfaced wear resistant ferrous bodies

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1998496A (en) * 1929-04-09 1935-04-23 Fiedler Marcell Process of surface plating of metals with alloys
US2048276A (en) * 1932-04-21 1936-07-21 Bruno S Teschner Plated metal having carbide surface
US2443123A (en) * 1945-01-12 1948-06-08 Philip O Solon Cutting wheel for flint igniters
US2804412A (en) * 1955-12-22 1957-08-27 Gardner Denver Co Carburization of metal articles
US2804413A (en) * 1955-12-22 1957-08-27 Gardner Denver Co Carburization of metal articles

Cited By (8)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3282746A (en) * 1963-11-18 1966-11-01 Formsprag Co Method of hardening wear surfaces and product
DE1521237B1 (en) * 1963-11-18 1970-04-23 Formsprag Co Workpieces and components made of ferrous materials with a wear layer and process for their production
US3263455A (en) * 1964-04-27 1966-08-02 Ronson Corp Lighter construction
US3262289A (en) * 1964-10-28 1966-07-26 Biesenbach Ginu Ignition spark wheels
US3314134A (en) * 1964-10-28 1967-04-18 Biesenbach Ginn Ignition spark wheels
US3910751A (en) * 1974-01-07 1975-10-07 Stephen P Chernock Spark wheels, method of manufacturing spark wheels, and dies for use therein
US5334263A (en) * 1991-12-05 1994-08-02 General Electric Company Substrate stabilization of diffusion aluminide coated nickel-based superalloys
US5997281A (en) * 1998-02-20 1999-12-07 Lei; Hou Chong Safety lighter

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GB853276A (en) 1960-11-02

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