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Heat Treatment Companies

ÌÇÐÄVlog provides an extensive list of heat treatment companies. Utilize our website to review and source heat treatment companies with our easy-to-use features which allow you to locate heat treatment companies that will design, engineer, and provide heat treatment services for your exact specifications. Our request for quote forms make it easy to connect with leading heat treatment companies. View company profiles, website links, locations, phone number, product videos, customer reviews, product specific news articles and other production information. We are a leading manufacturer directory who will connect you with the right manufacturers whether you are looking for salt bath heat treating, vacuum heat treating, or normalizing heat treatment. Read Industry Info...

  • Jackson, MI

    Industrial Steel Treating Company (IST) opened operations in Jackson, Michigan in 1943. Initially, as a salt bath heat treat, IST serviced the growing tool and die industry in mid-Michigan, Ohio and Indiana. Today, IST is one of the largest and most modern heat treat facilities in the U.S. Two separate, across-the-street facilities house production, prototype sample and warehouse-inventory management capabilities within 350,000 SF.

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  • Meadville, PA

    We do vacuum heat treating such as hardening, straighten parts & minimize distortions. We specialize in vacuum heat treating technology & offer a wide range of heat treating choices. At Peters’ Heat Treating, our main concern is on precision parts & has been for over 100 years of combined experience. Some services we offer: vacuum hardening/annealing, vacuum aging, & induction hardening/annealing.

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  • Baltimore, MD

    At Aalberts Surface Technologies, we are dedicated to advancing material performance through innovative heat treatment solutions that enhance the durability, strength, and reliability of critical components. Our work centers around precision heat treating processes designed to meet the demanding specifications of industries that rely on exacting material performance, including aerospace, automotive, energy, and industrial manufacturing.

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  • Waterloo, IA

    Established in 1981, Advanced Heat Treat Corp. (AHT) is a recognized global leader in providing heat treat services and metallurgical solutions. Between locations in Alabama, Iowa and Michigan, AHT offers over 20 surface treatments including trademarked processes UltraGlow® Ion Nitriding, UltraGlow® Induction Hardening, UltraOx®, and more. Quality certifications include ISO 9001:2015, Nadcap Heat Treating, IATF16949:2016, Federal Firearms License, ITAR registered, and more.

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Heat Treatment Industry Information

Heat Treatment

Heat treatment is a broad term encompassing a number of thermally involved methods and processes used to modify the physical, mechanical, and even chemical properties of industrial materials with the goal of adding hardness or ductility.

Quick links to Heat Treatment Information

Applications of Heat Treatment

Through a series of timed heating and cooling cycles, heat treatment processes such as case hardening and annealing, cause a realignment of internal atomic structures and create application-specific parts that are softened or hardened as needed. Both formed parts and raw materials may be treated in this manner.

These industries commonly use heat treating to produce parts:

  • Automotive
  • Construction
  • Military
  • Tool and Die
  • Shipping
  • Transportation
  • Aerospace

Such parts possess the heightened capabilities required for harsh industrial applications. Hardness and ductility, as well as tensile, impact, and yield strengths are significantly improved or reduced by variable heat treating procedures. Post-production heat treating also relieves stress and tension that may have been an incidental byproduct of manufacturing processes such as cold-rolling, forging, and welding.

Although heat treating metals and their alloys, such as aluminum, steel, copper, and stainless steel are the most predominant applications for heat treatment, specialized technologies are commonly employed to alter the physical and mechanical properties of glasses, ceramics, and polymers as well. This energy intensive process is extremely versatile but must be carefully conducted to reduce the opportunity for mechanical failure due to insufficient heating or cooling.

Heat Treatment Process and Customization

Heat treatment providers often start by considering the end goal of heat treatment. Rather than request a certain procedure, clients dictate the desired results or requirements for a given part or material. Metallurgists and other heat treatment professionals then determine the operations necessary to produce hardened or softened, flexible or rigid components.

Often more than one process is used. With the end goal in mind, clients and engineers look at the microstructure (or internal atomic infrastructure) of the material to be treated. Grains or crystallites form a complex lattice, the structure of which is reflected in the properties of the pre-treated material. Heat treatment raises the temperature of these grains to what is known as the critical temperature. This is the point at which the lattice begins to come undone.

The temperature, rate, and duration of heating as well as the speed, rate and degree of cooling are then manipulated so as to realign the atoms. In general, fast cooling produced via cooled gas or liquids engulfing the material results in coarse grain, which provides excellent strength and rigidity but may also become brittle. Slow cooling, such as that used in annealing, produces small grain structures with impressive strength but also flexibility. While heating and cooling are essential to all heat treatments, additional considerations include chemical restructuring.