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CUMMINS News
CUMMINS AND OAK RIDGE NATIONAL LABORATORY DEVELOP NOVEL STEEL ALLOY
The new material will increase the durability and ultimate efficiency of Cummins’ engines and better serve the company’s customers and fleets.
Cummins Inc. announced the development of a new high-temperature steel alloy in collaboration with Oak Ridge National Laboratory (ORNL).
As a leading manufacturer in the engine and power markets, Cummins continues to discover ways to improve performance, capability and durability within its products. Since starting its alliance with ORNL in 2018, the project to research and develop an alternative steel alloy with significantly improved high-temperature oxidation resistance and strength, while maintaining affordability, has provided quick and effective results.
Previous materials have limited engine efficiency gains and emissions reductions, and prohibited engineers from extracting more heat from the combustion process, due to materials degrading prematurely from oxidation, scaling, and cracking.
The new material is significantly stronger at elevated temperatures, compared to the most commonly used commercial steel, 4140, and has virtually eliminated those degradation pathways. When comparing the new alloy to 4140 steel, the novel steel alloy exhibited 85% greater Ultimate Tensile Strength (maximum stress a material can withstand while being stretched or pulled before breaking) and 143% greater fatigue strength (maximum cyclical stress that can be applied for the material to withstand at least 10 million cycles before failure) at 600 °C.
Additionally, in an aggressive, long-term engine test of pistons manufactured from the new material, no cracking occurred and very little oxidation or scaling occurred. The new medium carbon steel offers at least a 50oC increase in temperature capability as compared to current 4140 steels. Cooperative development of the new alloy was supported by the Department of Energy’s Vehicle Technologies Office LightMAT Program.
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