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武士刀的制作

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来源:
BRADLEY DODD
Department of Engineering Science, University of Oxford (England)
(Received February 22, 1978; in revised form April 27, 1978)


1楼2014-04-02 04:46回复
    Smelting of the ore by direct reduction
    The earliest method known to man for obtaining iron from oxide ores was
    by direct reduction with charcoal. In the direct reduction process iron ore is
    mixed with charcoal and heated in a simple furnace. Oxygen from the air is
    admitted at the base of the furnace and combines with the hot charcoal to
    form carbon dioxide. This reaction is exothermic and the carbon dioxide
    reacts almost immediately with the surrounding hot charcoal to form carbon
    monoxide. It is the carbon monoxide which reduces the iron ore higher up in
    the furnace, where, as the reaction proceeds, the reduced iron forms porous
    globules. These globules gradually descend to the hotter regions of the furnace
    and eventually become pasty, forming sponge iron on cooling. The
    sponge irons resulting from ancient direct reduction processes contain many
    impurities such as slag inclusions and unreduced oxide [ 1 ].
    For over a millennium, in Japan, direct reduction was the first step in the
    manufacture of a Japanese sword. The ore most commonly used was fine
    sand iron which was collected from river banks. The wooded regions of Japan
    where the iron oxide-bearing sand could easily be collected, became famous
    for the making of swords. One such area is Bizen in Okayama Prefecture (to
    the west of Kobe; nowadays the area of Bizen is very famous for its potteries
    whose kilns are fired with pine).
    The furnace was made of some heat-resistant bricks with a layer of clay
    spread inside it. Wood and rice straw were burnt in the furnace initially, to
    dry the clay and particularly the furnace bottom. Once the furnace was dry,
    charcoal was added and a fire started with the aid of oxygen from the air,
    often supplied by bellows. The charcoal was usually made from red pine
    because of its lower water content. When the fire was well-lit sand iron would
    be placed in the charcoal. Charcoal was subsequently added from time-to-time
    to regulate the temperature which could be judged through a window in the
    furnace wall. Slag was run-off in a slag runner near the bottom of the furnace.
    Typically after about seven hours, the reaction was completed and the furnace was destroyed. The sponge iron, which was in a depression in the
    base of the furnace, was then removed after clearing away the debris. For a
    furnace of about one metre in height a yield of about 18 kg of sponge iron
    would have resulted from charging the furnace with about 70 kg of sand iron
    and 11 huyo of charcoal (a huyo is a rice straw sack of about a quarter of a
    cubic metre capacity). Each crafsman had his own secret additions to the
    furnace smelting ingredients besides charcoal and sand iron. Thus, in old
    texts references can be found to additions of old nails and broken pottery.
    Depending on the maximum furnace temperature and the amounts of
    charcoal, sand iron and other additions, the resulting sponge iron could have
    had widely differing carbon contents. For example, if the furnace temperature
    had been between 800°C and 1000°C, ductile sponge iron containing about
    0.05% carbon would have resulted, whereas, if the temperature had been
    between 1100°C and 1200°C, sponge iron containing between 0.8% and 1.8%
    carbon would have formed. At furnace temperatures in excess of about
    1300°C, the sponge iron would have melted completely dissolving between
    1.8% and 3.5% carbon; this iron was extremely brittle and hard. Sponge iron
    formed at the intermediate temperature of about ll00°C was the metal that
    would eventually end as the outer covering of the sword, including the
    hardened cutting edge. A typical composition of this steel was: 1.33%C,
    0.006%S, 0.014%P, with traces of Cu and Mn. This steel is remarkably pure
    when compared with modern Western steels which contain silicon, manganese
    and sulphur.


    2楼2014-04-02 04:49
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      Quenching
      The final sword was required to have a very hard zone in the vicinity of the
      cutting edge and a soft interior, therefore some means of selective quenching
      was required. This was accomplished by covering the entire sword with a thick
      coating of clay. The clay was removed from the regions near the cutting edge,
      see Fig. 6, in a particular pattern, the pattern often depending on the individual
      swordsmith. The sword was then placed in a simple charcoal furnace and
      heated to above 800°C. Then the sword was plunged into water. The clay
      acted as an insulator and only the region not covered with it was cooled at a
      fast enough rate to transform directly from unstable austenite to martensite.
      The cooling rate of the ductile core was very much slower than that of the
      cutting edge and therefore the resulting microstructure would have been that
      typical of a hypo-eutectoid steel, that is pro-eutectoid ferrite plus a little
      pearlite.
      Fresh river water was reputed to have been the best quenching medium
      and only a single quench was used. The temperature of the quenchant was a
      well-guarded secret and, depending on the individual swordsmith, the water
      may have contained certain secret additions which could have included soft,
      straw and rice husks. It seems highly probable that quenching was only
      carried out at a particular time of year when the river water was at the
      required temperature.
      Possible quenching defects would have included quenching cracks and
      'half-moon' or 'half-beak' cracks. If any of these defects were discovered on
      the sword, after cleaning off the clay and oxide, the sword would have been
      discarded. Also due to the quenching stresses the curvature of the blade (sori)
      would have changed, therefore the initial curvature before quenching would
      have been forged with this in mind.


      6楼2014-04-02 04:54
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        Grinding and final polishing
        After quenching, the sword was scraped clean of clay and the cutting edge
        was cleaned to some extent of the oxide. The sword was examined carefully
        by the swordsmith so that he could check that no quenching defects were
        present. If necessary, the curvature of the sword was carefully adjusted by
        pressing the back of the sword against a hot copper block. After this, the
        sword was ready for grinding and polishing.
        Apparently little is known about these final operations, however it is
        known that at least ten different grinding stones of differing coarsenesses were
        utilized.
        After final polishing, the true beauty of this complex series of operations
        could be seen. Referring to Fig. 7, the parts of the sword that were originally
        covered with clay during quenching are highly reflective. On close examination,
        these surfaces can be seen to have a characteristic texture or mechanical
        fibering. This fibering is the result of the lamination processes and consists of
        inclusions and elongated grains. The inclusions are spread along the welded
        interfaces (parallel to the cutting edge) resulting from lamination. The sizes
        of these inclusions depend upon the number of laminations made.
        The areas of the sword near the cutting edge that were not covered with
        clay are martensitic, and after polishing, have a characteristic diffuse whitish
        or milky appearance. These regions of martensite are called nioi.
        Finally, one of the most interesting regions of the sword is the transition
        zone between the hardened and unhardened regions. This zone is usually a
        fine line called the nie line, whose microstructure usually consists of a few
        relatively coarse areas of martensite in pearlite. The areas of martensite appear
        as very small bright spots and as the angle of the blade is changed relative
        to the light source these spots of martensite flash. The bright spots give the
        nie line an intriguing appearance and add to the value of a sword.
        The final stage in the making of any sword would have been the engraving
        of the tang with the swordsmith's name. A handle and a hand guard (tsuba)
        were then attached and a scabbard fitted. The numerous adornments to a
        Japanese sword are a study in themselves!


        7楼2014-04-02 04:55
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          Fig. 2. (a) Grooving a forge-welded block; (b) opening the groove and bending the block;
          (c) forge-welding the folded block. This sequency of operations was repeated as many as
          thirty times.


          9楼2014-04-02 04:58
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            Fig. 3. Bending of the grooved block by the traditional method (from Ref. [ 3 ] ).


            10楼2014-04-02 05:00
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              Fig. 4. The forge-welding of the core to the tool steel and the stages in the manufacture
              of the composite sword (after Ref. [ 2 ] ).


              11楼2014-04-02 05:01
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                Fig. 6. Section of a blade showing the clay coating which has been selectively removed
                from the sword blade, allowing only the region at the blade to transform to martensite
                on quenching.


                13楼2014-04-02 05:04
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                  Fig. 7. ~t~.e appearance of part of a finished sword showing the mart~nsitic area of the
                  blade and the transition zone between the nioi and the more slowly cooled back


                  14楼2014-04-02 05:05
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                    References
                    1 The Making, Shaping and Treating of Steel, 9th edn., United States Steel Corp., 1971.
                    2 E.C. Bain, J. Iron Steel Inst., 200 (1962) 265.
                    3 J. Honma and K. Sato (Eds.), The Making of Japanese Swords, Tokuma -- Shoten (in
                    Japanese), 1966.
                    4 N. Ogasawara, Japanese Swords, 3rd edn., Hoikusha Publishing Company Ltd., 1975


                    15楼2014-04-02 05:06
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                      看吧里似乎没有专门的讲武士刀制作的帖,特来一发。如果反响好的话,会发大马士革刀研究的帖


                      16楼2014-04-02 05:06
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                        直接发大马士革吧,


                        IP属地:安徽来自Android客户端17楼2014-04-02 06:50
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                          看不懂英文不行


                          IP属地:安徽来自手机贴吧18楼2014-04-02 08:34
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                            IP属地:辽宁来自Android客户端19楼2014-04-02 08:41
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                              lamorak_luo:看见你们在厚颜无耻的刷经验,还刷的这么俗不可耐,对于你们这种丧心病狂令人发指的行为,我真的很想说:别落下我!


                              来自Android客户端20楼2014-04-02 08:42
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