Heat Treating/

Annealing

Annealing is a heat treating process that is commonly used in a number of industrial and commercial settings to heat and slowly cool a number of materials in order to alter their physical properties for improved strength and ductility. This particular type of heat treatment is exceedingly common. Though most often used to relieve the internal stresses of glasses and metals, ceramic annealing is also available.

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Solar Atmospheres, Inc.
Souderton, PA
800-347-3236
Solar Atmospheres, Inc. has over 40 furnaces at two locations in Eastern and Western, PA, ranging from lab to 36-ft. long, 150,000-lb. capacity. Solar's services include quality annealing with specialized processes, carburizing for case & surface hardening and much more. Solar can process your small & large parts in the world`s largest commercial vac. furnace.
Vac Met Incorporated
Warren, MI
586-264-8100
Vac Met, Incorporated offers hydrogen atmosphere processing using state-of-the-art equipment up to 84" in diameter by 120" deep. Vac Met, Inc. is a high-tech processing company specializing in annealing services utilizing the modern machinery capable of proving your business the superior solutions you need to stay ahead of the curve. Please call Vac Met today for quality and affordable services.
Saran Industries, L.P.
Indianapolis, IN
866-585-8024
Saran Industries, L.P. is your full-service finishing and custom-processing solutions provider, offering high-quality annealing and other services via two large batch ovens, maximum 600°F and 12 Channel Datapaq Recording Systems. Saran is an ISO 9001:2000 certified company and its employees know value and quality and want to pass that along to their customers. Call Saran Industries today!
Byron Products
Fairfield, OH
513-870-9111
Byron Products is a leading supplier of fully integrated metallurgical products. Byron has state-of-the-art machinery and products and specializes in annealing in addition to many other related services. Customers like you care about high quality products at a competitive price, and so does Byron Products. Call today for more information or visit Byron's helpful website.
Hayes Heat Treating Corp.
Cranston, RI
401-467-5201
Established in 1962, Hayes Corporation is a specialty annealing facility, utilizing equipment manufactured by C.I. Hayes Inc. Hayes is ISO 9000:2008 registered and AS-9100C registered and is Nadcap accredited since 1997. Hayes supports the aerospace, automotive, electronic, medical and machine tool industries and provides on-time delivery no matter what. Call Hayes today.

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Industry Information

Annealing

Several occasions occur during which manufacturers will employ annealing with any of these materials. Stock forms of raw materials are often annealed for the improved flexibility needed for future machining. Semi-finished parts likewise undergo process annealing, some several times over in between manufacturing processes such as rolling, drawing, forging, spinning, extruding, heading and welding, all of which cause internal stress and reduce the workability of materials. Annealing alleviates this stress and is therefore used on finished products before they are to be introduced to the market or fitted to machinery or equipment. Industries including automotive, food processing, aerospace, tool and die, plumbing and many others utilize this treatment for pipes, tubes, cutlery, engine components and paneling. Several advancements in annealing technology allow for not only improved processing, but also significant gains in efficiency. Improved chamber or annealing furnace designs allow for better seals which reduce escaping heat and emissions, provide better temperature control which results in more uniform heat treatments, combine natural gas and electric heater to cut costs and improve monitoring capabilities such as computerized systems and furnace programming. 

The first step in any annealing process is to heat the material, be it copper, steel, glass or ceramic. Materials are loaded into batch furnaces or placed on circulating conveyors in continuously run operations. The temperature is raised to the re-crystallization temperature of that material and ‘soaked' until the piece is uniformly heated. The thickness of a part or form therefore has a significant impact on the heat treating process. At this temperature, the atomic structure changes as do the physical properties of the metal. The stresses inherent in the materials relax as crystal defects or dislocations are removed. The refined grains then redistribute and begin to reform in finer strain free lattices that nucleate and replace deformations caused by previous stresses. Once the materials reach the equilibrium state with uniform composition, they may be slowly cooled to ensure a fine grain. Heat treating metals through the annealing process is fairly simple. Simplicity, however, does not negate the necessity for extreme precision throughout the process. Annealing furnaces must be able to maintain a high degree of temperature accuracy and heating uniformity to ensure that the material is heated evenly throughout. The thickness, heat capacity, thermal conductivity and thermal expansion coefficient of a material play a large role in the ease of annealing. The details of annealing, such as timing and temperature, are dependent upon the precise composition of the alloy or other material to be processed. While re-crystallization temperatures vary widely, a range from 500 degrees Fahrenheit to 1400 degrees Fahrenheit generally satisfies the needs of glass and metallurgical industries.