what is physical and chemical properties of borozone mioofure
Answers
Borazon was first produced in 1957 by Robert H. Wentorf, Jr., a physical chemist working for the General Electric Company.[1] In 1969, General Electric adopted the name Borazon as its trademark for the material.
Contents [hide] 1 Uses and production2 See also3 References4 External linksUses and production[edit]Borazon has a number of uses, such as: cutting tools, dies, punches, shears, knives, saw blades, bearing rings, needles, rollers, spacers, balls, pump, compressor parts, engine & drive train components (e.g. camshafts, crankshafts, gears, valve stems, drive shafts, CV joints, piston pins, fuel injectors, turbochargers, and aerospace and land-based gas turbine parts such as vanes, blades, nozzles, and seals), surgical knives, blades, scissors, honing, superfinishing, cylinder liners, connecting rods, grinding of steel and paper mill rolls, and gears.
Prior to the production of Borazon, diamond was the preferred abrasive used for grinding very hard superalloys but it could not be used effectively on steels because carbon tends to dissolve in iron at high temperatures. Aluminium oxide was the conventional abrasive used on hardened steel tools