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The Carbon Cure: How Low-Temperature Carburizing Tames Friction in 3D-Printed Steel of Engineering today

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Home - Engineering - The Carbon Cure: How Low-Temperature Carburizing Tames Friction in 3D-Printed Steel of Engineering today

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The Carbon Cure: How Low-Temperature Carburizing Tames Friction in 3D-Printed Steel of Engineering today

Last updated: May 3, 2026 4:27 pm
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The Carbon Cure: How Low-Temperature Carburizing Tames Friction in 3D-Printed Steel

Selective laser melting (SLM) of 316L stainless steel has unlocked complex geometries for structural components, yet the process introduces a pronounced anisotropic microstructure—layered melt pools and columnar grains—that yields direction-dependent tribological performance. Previous studies have focused on post-processing strategies to homogenize surface properties, but none have systematically examined how low-temperature gaseous carburizing interacts with the unique microstructural hierarchy of additively manufactured parts. This investigation, forthcoming in Wear (Volume 597, July 2026), reveals that carburizing at 470 °C creates a supersaturated carbon diffusion zone up to 30 μm deep, fundamentally altering the wear regime from severe adhesive wear to mild oxidative wear along the build direction.

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Previous Article A new study shows that blocking the IL-1β signaling pathway in the brain can halt the damaging inflammation that drives neuromyelitis optica (NMO), a severe autoimmune disease. Researchers found that using an antisense oligonucleotide (ASO) to lower IL-1β levels protected nerve cells and improved movement in mice, offering a promising new treatment approach for this condition.
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