SUPERHARD CONSTRUCTION
The present disclosure generally relates to constructions including a body of polycrystalline diamond (PCD) material attached to a substrate.
This disclosure relates to a superhard construction comprising, for example, a body of polycrystalline diamond (PCD) material attached to a substrate.
BACKGROUNDPolycrystalline superhard materials, such as polycrystalline diamond (PCD) and polycrystalline cubic boron nitride (PCBN) may be used in a wide variety of tools for cutting, machining, drilling or degrading hard or abrasive materials such as rock, metal, ceramics, composites and wood-containing materials. In particular, tool inserts in the form of cutting elements comprising PCD material are widely used in drill bits for boring into the earth to extract oil or gas. The working life of superhard tool inserts may be limited by fracture of the superhard material, including by spalling and chipping, or by wear of the tool insert.
Cutting elements such as those for use in rock drill bits or other cutting tools typically have a body in the form of a substrate which has an interface end/surface and a superhard material which forms a cutting layer bonded to the interface surface of the substrate by, for example, a sintering process. The substrate is generally formed of a tungsten carbide-cobalt alloy, sometimes referred to as cemented tungsten carbide and the superhard material layer is typically polycrystalline diamond (PCD), polycrystalline cubic boron nitride (PCBN) or a thermally stable product TSP material such as thermally stable polycrystalline diamond.
Polycrystalline diamond (PCD) is an example of a superhard material (also called a superabrasive material) comprising a mass of substantially inter-grown diamond grains, forming a skeletal mass defining interstices between the diamond grains. PCD material typically comprises at least about 80 volume % of diamond and is conventionally made by subjecting an aggregated mass of diamond grains to an ultra-high pressure of greater than about 5 GPa, and temperature of at least about 1,200° C., for example. A material wholly or partly filling the interstices may be referred to as filler or binder material.
PCD is typically formed in the presence of a sintering aid such as cobalt, which promotes the inter-growth of diamond grains. Suitable sintering aids for PCD are also commonly referred to as a solvent-catalyst material for diamond, owing to their function of dissolving, to some extent, the diamond and catalysing its re-precipitation. A solvent-catalyst for diamond is understood be a material that is capable of promoting the growth of diamond or the direct diamond-to-diamond inter-growth between diamond grains at a pressure and temperature condition at which diamond is thermodynamically stable. Consequently the interstices within the sintered PCD product may be wholly or partially filled with residual solvent-catalyst material. Most typically, PCD is often formed on a cobalt-cemented tungsten carbide substrate, which provides a source of cobalt solvent-catalyst for the PCD. Materials that do not promote substantial coherent intergrowth between the diamond grains may themselves form strong bonds with diamond grains, but are not suitable solvent-catalysts for PCD sintering.
Cemented tungsten carbide which may be used to form a suitable substrate is formed from carbide particles being dispersed in a cobalt matrix by mixing tungsten carbide particles/grains and cobalt together then heating to solidify. To form the cutting element with a superhard material layer such as PCD or PCBN, diamond particles or grains or CBN grains are placed adjacent the cemented tungsten carbide body in a refractory metal enclosure such as a niobium enclosure and are subjected to high pressure and high temperature so that inter-grain bonding between the diamond grains or CBN grains occurs, forming a polycrystalline ultra hard diamond or CBN layer.
In some instances, the substrate may be fully cured prior to attachment to the superhard material layer whereas in other cases, the substrate may be green, that is, not fully cured. In the latter case, the substrate may fully cure during the HTHP sintering process. The substrate may be in powder form and may solidify during the sintering process used to sinter the superhard material layer.
Cobalt has a significantly different coefficient of thermal expansion from that of diamond and, as such, upon heating of the polycrystalline diamond material during use, the cobalt in the substrate to which the PCD material is attached expands and may cause cracks to form in the PCD material, resulting in the deterioration of the PCD layer.
To reduce the residual stresses created at the interface between the substrate and the superhard layer, interface surfaces on substrates are known to have been formed with a plurality concentric annular rings projecting from the planar interface surface. Due to the difference in the coefficients of thermal expansion of the substrate and the superhard material layer, these layers contract at different rates when the cutting element is cooled after HTHP sintering. Tensile stress regions are formed on the upper surfaces of the rings, whereas compressive stress regions are formed on the valleys between such rings. Consequently, when a crack begins to grow in use, it may grow annularly along the entire upper surface of the annular ring where it is exposed to tensile stresses, or may grow along the entire annular valley between the projecting rings where it is exposed to compressive stresses, leading to the early failure of the cutting element.
It is also known for cutting element substrate interfaces to comprise a plurality of spaced apart projections, the projections having relatively flat upper surfaces projecting from a planar interface surface.
Common problems that affect cutting elements are chipping, spalling, partial fracturing, and cracking of the superhard material layer. Another problem is cracking along the interface between the superhard material layer and the substrate and the propagation of the crack across the interface surface. These problems may result in the early failure of the superhard material layer and thus in a shorter operating life for the cutting element.
The working life of PCD material in a cutter used during drilling operations is typically determined, to a large extent, by the initiation and propagation of cracks in the PCD material. In particular, cracks tend to form behind a wear scar and propagate towards the free surface of the PCD material, where they coalesce and may result in spalling and catastrophic failure of the cutter. It is desirable that any cracks that form should be prevented from propagating through the PCD material or at least their propagation be directed to reduce the risk of spalling. One solution is to increase the toughness of the PCD material to minimise crack formation, however, tougher materials tend to have decreased hardness and therefore are less wear resistant so may wear faster and have a shorter lifetime.
Accordingly, there is a need for a cutting element having an enhanced operating life in high wear or high impact applications, such as boring into rock, with a superhard material layer in which the likelihood of cracking, chipping, and fracturing is reduced or controllable.
SUMMARYViewed from a first aspect there is provided a superhard construction comprising:
-
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion; and
- a region of material in the substrate having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein the region of material comprises a solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry or a partial solid of revolution; and
- wherein the region has a point, edge or face in contact with or extending to the layer of superhard material and/or a peripheral surface of the superhard construction.
The superhard material may comprise, for example, polycrystalline diamond material or polycrystalline cubic boron nitride.
Viewed from a second aspect there is provided a superhard construction comprising:
-
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion;
- a region of material in the substrate having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein the superhard construction has a longitudinal axis;
- wherein the region of material comprises a solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry or a partial solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry, said region of material having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate; and
- wherein the axis of symmetry of the solid or partial solid of revolution is offset from the longitudinal axis of the superhard construction and not parallel to said longitudinal axis.
Viewed from a further aspect there is provided a superhard construction comprising:
-
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion;
- one or more regions of material in the substrate having different coefficient(s) of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein one or more of the regions of material comprise one or more annuli.
Viewed from another aspect there is provided a superhard construction comprising:
-
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion;
- one or more regions of material in the substrate having different coefficient(s) of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein one or more of said regions extends into the layer of superhard material and into the substrate, one or more of said regions comprising a solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry or a partial solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry.
Examples of superhard constructions comprising, for example, polycrystalline diamond bodies will now be described in more detail, with reference to the accompanying figures in which:
The term “solid of revolution” as used herein is to be understood to include solids of revolution about an axis of symmetry and solids derived therefrom, and so includes bodies from which a segment has been removed, that is, a partial solid of revolution such as a cylinder with a segment excised.
As used herein, the term “bulk of the substrate” refers to the substrate material of largest amount by volume.
As used herein, the term “stress state” refers to a compressive, unstressed or tensile stress state. Compressive and tensile stress states are understood to be opposite stress states from each other. In a cylindrical geometrical system, the stress states may be axial, radial or circumferential, or a net stress state.
As used herein, the term “residual stress state” refers to the stress state of a body or part of a body in the absence of an externally-applied loading force. The residual stress state of a PCD structure, including a layer structure may be measured by means of a strain gauge and progressively removing material layer by layer.
In the embodiment shown in
The same reference numbers refer to the same respective features in all drawings.
With reference to
The embodiment shown in
The height of the second annulus 40 is not constrained by the height of the first annulus 30 and, as shown in
In a further embodiment, as shown in
The annuli 30 and 40 shown in one or more of
In a further embodiment, as shown in
The third annulus 50 may, for example, have a rectangular cross section, as shown in
With reference to
A further annulus 50 which may be, for example, of similar or larger inner diameter than the first annulus 30 may be positioned such that it abuts the surface of the first annulus 30 opposing that forming the interface with the body of PCD material 10. The outer diameter of the further annulus 50 may be substantially equal to the outer diameter of the first annulus 30 and the substrate 20. The inner peripheral surface defining the hole of the further annulus 50 may be curved such that, in cross section as shown in
The average coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of the cylindrical insert 60 is different from, for example lower than, the average CTE of the bulk of the substrate 12 and may be formed of the same material or a different material from the annuli 30, 40, 50 and/or the body of PCD material.
With regard to the embodiments shown in
A further embodiment is shown in
The embodiment shown in
The embodiment shown in
With reference to
In the embodiments of
In the embodiment shown in
With reference to
In the embodiment of
With reference to
With reference to
With reference to
The embodiment shown in
With reference to
With reference to
Whilst not wishing to be bound by a particular theory, it is believed that the solids of revolution in the PCD constructions described above alter the residual tensile and compressive stresses in the PCD construction. These stresses are illustrated in
A number of embodiments are described in more detail with reference to the examples below, which are not intended to be limiting.
Residual stress analyses were performed using the ABAQUS Finite Element Analysis program to give an indication of stress states of different configurations. For the sake of simplicity, only axisymmetric cases were selected. In the model, each configuration was taken from high pressure and temperature conditions down to room temperature and atmospheric pressure. The residual Maximum Principal Stresses in the cutter were examined and corresponding stress contours in a large area of the cross-section which includes the cutting corner are shown in
Most of the examples were variants of the conventional cutter “Case 0” with either Diamond-Enhanced Carbide (DEC) or WC-6 wt % Co cemented carbide used to form the solids of revolution in the substrate 12.
A number of variants were considered for manufacture and wear tests. Table 1 below shows the properties of the materials used to form the PCD constructions which were then subjected to linear elastic FEA analysis.
In addition to the reference case (Case 0), the following variants were analysed:
-
- Case 1: a PCD construction having a solid of revolution comprised of DEC and in the form of an annulus as shown in
FIG. 1 ; - Case 2: a PCD construction having a solid of revolution comprised of WC6 wt % Co and in the form of an annulus as shown in
FIG. 1 ; - Case 3: a PCD construction having a solid of revolution comprised of DEC and in the form of an annulus as shown in
FIG. 1 with an additional solid of revolution in the form of a co-axial cylinder within the annulus, the cylinder also being formed of DEC; and - Case 4: a PCD construction having a solid of revolution comprised of WC6 wt % Co and in the form of an annulus as shown in
FIG. 1 with an additional solid of revolution in the form of a co-axial cylinder within the annulus, the cylinder also being formed of WC6 wt % Co.
- Case 1: a PCD construction having a solid of revolution comprised of DEC and in the form of an annulus as shown in
For each geometry and material, five sizes of the solid(s) of revolution were considered.
The constraints on the geometries were as follows:
-
- 1. PCD construction nominally of 16 mm diameter and 12 mm overall height with nominal thickness of the PCD body of 2.2 mm.
- 2. Annulus of square section and touching the substrate outer diameter and PCD body (as sown, for example, in
FIG. 1 ). - 3. Additional solid of revolution in the form of a cylinder, if present, having a height equal to the annulus section side, with the added cylinder coaxial with the PCD construction and its top surface in contact with the PCD body, the radius of the cylinder being equal to the length of the sides of the square cross-section of the annulus.
- 4. Annulus section having sides of lengths 2.00 mm, 2.25 mm, 2.50 mm, 2.75 mm and 3.00 mm were considered.
A further constraint was that, in all cases, the annulus and cylinder were of the same material.
Within these constraints the residual stress fields were found to be qualitatively substantially the same for the various annulus section sides (this observation applying to the cases where annuli and cylinders were used and to the cases where only annuli were used). See
Selected contours of the residual tensile and compressive stresses are shown in
In addition, a maximum and a minimum stress location is shown for each Case. The values corresponding to these are shown in Table 2. It will be seen that the maximum stress occurs on the interface of the PCD body and the substrate. Where there is an annulus present, this point is inside the annulus at the junction of the PCD body, the annulus and the substrate, the stress gradient moving from here into the bulk of the PCD as intended. By contrast, in the absence of an annulus, as shown in
Of these Cases, Case 1 (
For Case 1:
-
- 1. The tensile stress on the interface outer diameter is reduced (which may therefore reduce the probability of delamination of the PCD body from the substrate).
- 2. The compressive region in the PCD body is removed (which may assist in preventing the deflection of cracks into the PCD body towards the working surface, such deflection being an observed failure mechanism in conventional PCD constructions).
- 3. The stresses in the bulk substrate material enclosed by the annulus are particularly high with a large gradient away from the PCD body.
- 4. The stresses in the annulus itself are low tensile to compressive in nature, which may act to keep cracks which may develop in use, substantially away from the substrate outer surface in the region of the PCD body (again reducing the probability of delamination).
Case 2 (
-
- 1. The tensile stress on the interface outer diameter is reduced but by less than in the Case 1.
- 2. The compressive region in the PCD body is not removed.
- 3. The stresses in the bulk substrate material enclosed by the annulus remain high with a large gradient away from the PCD body.
- 4. The stresses in the annulus itself are quite low tensile to compressive in nature, keeping cracks substantially away from the substrate outer surface in the region of the PCD body.
- 5. Again only one feature (the annulus) is introduced into the substrate.
Case 3 (
-
- 1. The tensile stress on the interface outer diameter is reduced (which may assist in reducing the probability of delamination).
- 2. The compressive region near the outside diameter of the PCD body is removed (which may assist in preventing the deflection of cracks into the PCD body towards the working surface, such deflection being an observed failure mechanism in conventional PCD constructions).
- 3. The stresses in the bulk substrate material enclosed by the annulus and cylinder are particularly high with a large gradient away from the PCD body.
- 4. The stresses in the annulus itself are low tensile to compressive in nature, keeping cracks substantially away from the substrate outer surface in the region of the PCD body (which may also reduce the probability of delamination).
- 5. The consequent change in stress state is that the volume of the cylinder is almost totally compressive, with a small volume compressive “dome” of material just above it (in the orientation shown) in the core of the PCD body.
Case 4 (
-
- 1. The stress distributions and state in the annulus, adjacent PCD body and substrate are qualitatively much the same as in
FIG. 24 b. - 2. The effect of the cylinder seems quite independent of the annulus. It results in a small compressive zone in the cylinder and a quite large compressive zone in the region directly above the cylinder (in the orientation shown), which may be beneficial for arresting cracks should they penetrate that far into the PCD body.
- 3. The high tensile stress contours are more confined within the annulus than in
FIG. 23 b, which may assist in reducing the risk of delamination of the substrate.
- 1. The stress distributions and state in the annulus, adjacent PCD body and substrate are qualitatively much the same as in
The PCD constructions of Cases 0 to 4 mentioned above may for example, be constructed in the manner described below:
Baseline (Case 0).About 2 g of a multimodal diamond powder mix with average size of approximately 5 μm admixed with approximately 1 weight percent cobalt was poured into a Niobium inner cup and a cemented carbide substrate was placed on top of the inner cup and a Niobium outer cup placed over this, sealed and the canister pre-treated in an oven (vacuum outgassing at approximately 1050° C.). The canister was sintered at approximately 5.5 GPa and 1450° C. to produce a well-sintered PCD table. The cutter was not subjected to any leaching treatment. The cutter was subjected to a wear test, with the cutter suitably prepared as would be appreciated by the skilled person, to machine a granite block mounted on a vertical turret milling apparatus and counting the number of passes before failure. The wear resistance thus measured serves as a baseline for comparison with other cases.
Cases 1 and 2:As a first step a green body annulus would be prepared consisting of the powders required to achieve the DEC or WC6 wt % Co material in Table 1 mixed with suitable binders and pressed flat and to the required dimensions (for example a 3 mm annulus side section). A cylinder of the substrate powders with suitable binders, such as a cobalt based alloy would also be pressed flat such that it fitted inside the annulus with the same thickness. About 2 g of a multimodal diamond powder mix with average size of approximately 5 μm admixed with approximately 1 weight percent cobalt would be poured into a Niobium inner cup and compacted to achieve flatness. The green bodies, namely the DEC or WC6 wt % Co annulus and tungsten carbide disc would then be placed flatly on top of the compacted diamond admix. A cemented carbide substrate of approximately 3 mm reduced height would then be placed on top of the inner cup and the open arrangement vacuum outgassed at approximately 1050° C. A Niobium outer cup would be placed over this, sealed and the canister would be sintered at approximately 5.5 GPa and 1450° C. to produce well-sintered PCD table, annulus and carbide disc, with the individual parts well-sintered to one another. The cutter would be subjected to a wear test, with the cutter suitably prepared as would be appreciated by the skilled person, to machine a granite block mounted on a vertical turret milling apparatus and counting the number of passes before failure. The wear resistance thus measured should indicate a significant increase in passes achieved with respect to the baseline.
Cases 3 and 4:As a first step a green body annulus and cylinder would be prepared consisting of the powders required to achieve the DEC or WC6 wt % Co material in Table 1 mixed with a binder such as a cobalt based alloy and pressed flat and to the required dimensions (for example 3 mm annulus side section; cylinder 3 mm radius and 3 mm thick). An annulus of the substrate powders with suitable binders would also be pressed flat such that it fitted inside the annulus and around the cylinder, with the same thickness. About 2 g of a multimodal diamond powder mix with average size of approximately 5 μm admixed with approximately 1 weight percent cobalt would be poured into a Niobium inner cup and compacted to achieve flatness. The green bodies, namely the annulus, cylinder and tungsten carbide-cobalt ring would then be placed flatly on top of the compacted diamond admix. A cemented carbide substrate of approximately 3 mm reduced height would then be placed on top of the inner cup and the open arrangement vacuum outgassed at approximately 1050° C. A Niobium outer cup would be placed over this, sealed and the canister would be sintered at approximately 5.5 GPa and 1450° C. to produce well-sintered PCD table, annulus and carbide disc, with the individual parts well-sintered to one another. The cutter would be subjected to a wear test, with the cutter suitably prepared as would be appreciated by the skilled person, to machine a granite block mounted on a vertical turret milling apparatus and counting the number of passes before failure. The wear resistance thus measured should indicate a significant increase in passes achieved with respect to the baseline.
The one or more solid of revolution may have parameters for example geometry, size, position and material properties such that any propagating cracks in the PCD body may tend to be diverted into the substrate, that is, away from the free surfaces of the PCD material. Coefficient of Thermal Expansion (CTE) differences between the bulk of the substrate and the one or more solids of revolution therein may be used to divert the cracks in use. The substrate materials may therefore be considered to be functionally graded either in a monotonic manner or more generally with advantageous maxima and minima. Residual stress fields that are more tensile or less compressive may thereby be formed in certain regions of the substrate, on and away from the interface with the PCD body.
Whilst various embodiments have been described above with reference to example which are not intended to be limiting, it will be appreciated that many variations may be made. For example, the one or more solids of revolution are not restricted as to position in the substrate and may, for example, touch the body of PCD material or the substrate at one point, or a line segment, or over a circle or a surface or combinations of these. Furthermore, in other embodiments, the one or more solids of revolution may penetrate the body of PCD material and/or the substrate.
In addition, the materials that are used to form the solids of revolution are not restricted to cemented carbides. Suitable materials may include but are not limited to various grades of PCD, partially or fully leached PCD, diamond-enhanced carbides (DEC's), PCBN, cBN, cemented tungsten carbides, other carbides, nitrides, borides and carbonitrides of Groups 4, 5 and 6 transition metals, refractory metals; and/or one or more of the following may also be used: Cr3C2, NbN, ZrO2, TiN, Cr2N, Al2O3, VN, Mo2C, TiC, VC, ZrN, NbC, HfN, HfC, ZrC, TaC, WC, AIN, B4C, SiC, TaN, Si3N4, CrN (these latter materials conveniently covering a wide range of Coefficients of Thermal Expansion).
In some embodiments, if a solid of revolution is of unleached, partially leached or leached PCD, then this PCD may be of different microstructure, for example different binder, binder content, grain size, pool size, from any PCD in the body of PCD material attached to the substrate.
In some embodiments, if the bulk of the substrate is cemented tungsten carbide, then one or more solids of revolution of cemented tungsten carbide may be included having different microstructure, for example different binder, binder content, grain size, pool size, from those of the cemented tungsten carbide constituting the bulk of the substrate.
In some embodiments, if the bulk of the substrate is not of cemented tungsten carbide then a solid of revolution may be of the same type of material as the bulk of the substrate, but may have different microstructure such as different grain size, additives and the like from the material constituting the bulk of the bulk of the substrate.
In some embodiments, a given solid of revolution may be of one continuous material including mixtures and/or compounds of materials whilst other options include laminates of two or more bonded materials, fibres and/or macroscopic inclusions bonded into the bulk of the solid of revolution.
In some embodiments, in terms of material properties the one or more solid of revolution is primarily identified by different Coefficients of Thermal Expansion, though two or more may have the same Coefficients of Thermal Expansion.
In some embodiments, for example where a solid of revolution is formed of a PCD material, this may be but is not required to be differentiated from other PCD grades in the PCD construction in terms of contiguity in particular of diamond particles.
In some embodiments, where PCD materials are used in any solids of revolution then they may have significantly different Coefficients of Thermal Expansion while having statistically the same average particle sizes. This may be due to de facto cases where these conditions hold or by introducing additives such as for example TiC and/or VC which may result in PCD materials with the same statistical average particle sizes but significantly different Coefficients of Thermal Expansion. Another method for achieving this embodiment is to leach or partially leach one or more PCD materials.
In some embodiments, a solid of revolution positioned close to the body of PCD material may be separated from the PCD body by a thin layer of material with low shear strength compared to the adjoining body of PCD material.
Extensive use may be made of chamfers or radii or fillets or combinations of these to manage stress concentrations in all embodiments.
In summary, a number of the embodiments disclosed herein are solids of revolution coaxial with the PCD construction assuming the cutting tool to be axisymmetric: for example but not limited to annuli, a central cylinder, cone, truncated cone or hollow cone, all of any geometrically-allowable cross sectional shape, size and any of the materials described above. More complex embodiments disclosed herein include a right central cone with a truncated right central cone removed axisymmetrically from its core and a truncated right central cone with a right central cone removed axisymmetrically from its core.
Also disclosed herein are solids of revolution having symmetry axes not coinciding with or parallel to (or not coinciding with and not parallel to) any such symmetry axis in the PCD construction as a whole and/or the substrate as a whole for example annuli, discs, cylinders, cones, hollow cones and cup shapes distributed such that their axes are directed as required by the design parameters for each one selected to provide a desired stress distribution. Further complex embodiments herein disclosed include any of the solids disclosed above cut by surfaces to produce new solids for example wedge shapes, discs with portions sliced off by planes and the like.
The positioning of materials in the substrate is to assist in managing residual stresses in the PCD construction. In particular, the positioning is to assist in setting up the residual stresses to manage the propagation of cracks away from the surfaces of the body of PCD material, for example into the bulk of the substrate.
Claims
1. A superhard construction comprising:
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion; and
- a region of material in the substrate having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein the region of material comprises a solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry or a partial solid of revolution; and
- wherein the region has a point, edge or face in contact with or extending to the layer of superhard material and/or a peripheral surface of the superhard construction.
2. A superhard construction according to claim 1, wherein the superhard material comprises polycrystalline diamond material or polycrystalline cubic boron nitride.
3. A superhard construction according to claim 1, wherein the substrate is formed of a carbide selected from the group comprising tungsten carbide, niobium carbide, zirconium carbide, hafnium carbide, vanadium carbide, tantalum carbide and titanium carbide.
4. A superhard construction according to claim 1, further comprising two or more regions of material having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the substrate, one or more of said regions having the same or different coefficients of thermal expansion to others of said regions.
5. A superhard construction according to claim 1, wherein one or more regions of material have a lower coefficient of thermal expansion than the material forming the substrate.
6. A superhard construction according to claim 1, wherein one or more of the regions of material comprise one or more of a cylinder, a conical section, a frusto-conical section, an ovoid, an annulus, or partial sections thereof.
7. A superhard construction according to claim 1, wherein the PCD construction has a longitudinal axis and wherein one or more of the one or more regions of material have an axis of symmetry coaxial with the PCD construction.
8. A superhard construction according to claim 1, wherein the PCD construction has a longitudinal axis and wherein one or more of the one or more regions of material have an axis of symmetry offset from the longitudinal axis of the PCD construction.
9. A superhard construction according to claim 8, wherein one or more of the one or more regions of material have an axis of symmetry spaced from and non-parallel to the longitudinal axis of the PCD construction.
10. A superhard construction according to claim 1, comprising a plurality of said regions of material, one or more regions abutting a further one or more regions.
11. A superhard construction according to claim 10, wherein one of said plurality of regions is located radially within a further of said regions.
12. A superhard construction comprising:
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion;
- a region of material in the substrate having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein the superhard construction has a longitudinal axis;
- wherein the region of material comprises a solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry or a partial solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry, said region of material having a different coefficient of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate; and
- and
- wherein the axis of symmetry of the solid or partial solid of revolution is offset from the longitudinal axis of the superhard construction and not parallel to said longitudinal axis.
13. A superhard construction comprising:
- a layer of superhard material;
- a substrate attached to the layer of superhard material along an interface and formed of a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion;
- one or more regions of material in the substrate having different coefficient(s) of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the material forming the substrate;
- wherein one or more of the regions of material comprise one or more annuli.
14. A superhard construction according to claim 1, said region or one or more regions of material in the substrate having different coefficients of thermal expansion to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the substrate extend(s) into the layer of superhard material and into the substrate, one or more of said regions comprising a solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry or a partial solid of revolution about an axis of symmetry.
15. A superhard construction according to claim 12, wherein the one or more regions of material have a lower coefficient of thermal expansion than the material forming the substrate.
16. A superhard construction according to claim 12, wherein one or more of the regions has a point, edge or face in contact with or extending to the layer of superhard material and/or a peripheral surface of the superhard construction.
17. A superhard construction according to claim 12, wherein the superhard material comprises polycrystalline diamond material or polycrystalline cubic boron nitride.
18. A superhard construction according to claim 12, wherein one or more of the regions of material comprise one or more of a cylinder, a conical section, a frusto-conical section, an ovoid, an annulus, or partial sections thereof.
19. A superhard construction according to claim 12, comprising a plurality of said regions of material, one or more regions abutting a further one or more regions.
20. A superhard construction according to claim 19, wherein one of said plurality of regions is located radially within a further of said regions.
21. A superhard construction according to claim 12, wherein the PCD construction has a longitudinal axis and wherein one or more of the one or more regions of material have an axis of symmetry offset from the longitudinal axis of the PCD construction.
22. A superhard construction according to claim 12, wherein one or more of the one or more regions of material have an axis of symmetry spaced from and non-parallel to the longitudinal axis of the PCD construction.
Type: Application
Filed: May 30, 2012
Publication Date: Dec 6, 2012
Inventor: Philip Anagnostaras (Gauteng)
Application Number: 13/483,480
International Classification: B24D 3/06 (20060101);