The lower limit of the hot working temperature is determined by its recrystallization temperature. As a guideline, the lower limit of the hot working temperature of a material is 60% its melting temperature. The upper limit for hot working is determined by various factors, such as: excessive oxidation, grain growth, or an undesirable phase transformation. In practice materials are usually heated to the upper limit first to keep forming forces as low as possible and to maximize the amount of time available to hot work the workpiece. The most important aspect of any hot working process is controlling the temperature of the workpiece. 90% of the energy imparted into the workpiece is converted into heat. Therefore, if the deformation process is quick enough the temperature of the workpiece should rise, however, this does not usually happen in practice. Most of the heat is lost through the surface of the workpiece into the cooler tooling. This causes temperature gradients in the workpiece, usually due to non-uniform cross-sections where the thinner sections are cooler than the thicker sections. Ultimately, this can lead to cracking in the cooler, less ductile surfaces. One way to minimize the problem is to heat the tooling. The hotter the tooling the less heat lost to it, but as the tooling temperature rises, the tool life decreases. Therefore the tooling temperature must be compromised; commonly, hot working tooling is heated to 325–450 °C.
Advantages & disadvantages
The advantages are:
Decrease in yield strength, therefore it is easier to work and uses less energy or force
Increase in ductility
Elevated temperatures increase diffusion which can remove or reduce chemical inhomogeneities
Pores may reduce in size or close completely during deformation
In steel, the weak, ductile, face-centered-cubic austenite microstructure is deformed instead of the strong body-centered-cubic ferrite microstructure found at lower temperatures
Usually the initial workpiece that is hot worked was originally cast. The microstructure of cast items does not optimize the engineering properties, from a microstructure standpoint. Hot working improves the engineering properties of the workpiece because it replaces the microstructure with one that has fine spherical shaped grains. These grains increase the strength, ductility, and toughness of the material. The engineering properties can also be improved by reorienting the inclusions. In the cast state the inclusions are randomly oriented, which, when intersecting the surface, can be a propagation point for cracks. When the material is hot worked the inclusions tend to flow with the contour of the surface, creating stringers. As a whole the strings create a flow structure, where the properties are anisotropic. With the stringers oriented parallel to the surface it strengthens the workpiece, especially with respect tofracturing. The stringers act as "crack-arrestors" because the crack will want to propagate through the stringer and not along it. The disadvantages are:
Undesirable reactions between the metal and the surrounding atmosphere
Less precise tolerances due to thermal contraction and warping from uneven cooling
Grain structure may vary throughout the metal for various reasons
Requires a heating unit of some kind such as a gas or diesel furnace or an induction heater, which can be very expensive