@sgtuniversity.ac.in
Assistant Professor, Mechanical Engineering Department
SGT University
I am teaching and guiding students in academics and the research field. I have more than 11 years of industry experience and 5.5 years of teaching experience. I am doing research in the field of Microwave Materials Processing, Microwave Cladding, Surface Engineering, and Vibratory Cavitation Erosion, and is not limited to this. I have authored several research articles and book chapters in various International/National Web of Science (SCI/SCIE) and Scopus-indexed journals.
Microwave Materials Processing, Surface Engineering, Vibratory Cavitation Erosion, Composites, Mechanical and Metallurgical Characterization
Scopus Publications
Scholar Citations
Scholar h-index
Scholar i10-index
Sandeep Bansal, Sarbjeet Kaushal, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
Inderscience Publishers
Sandeep Bansal, Sarbjeet Kaushal, Jonty Mago, Dheeraj Gupta, Vivek Jain, Atul Babbar, and Deepti Sharma
SAGE Publications
Components operating in fluid handling systems most frequently experience cavitation erosion. The coatings/claddings fabricated by microwave irradiation method can remarkably improve cavitation erosion. In the present work, WC reinforced NiCrSiC based metal matrix composite clads with varying weight percentage of WC particles were developed on SS 316 steel using microwave heating method. The metallurgical and microstructural study of composite clads were analyzed using SEM/EDS, XRD and porosity, microhardness was also investigated. Cavitation erosion behavior of the claddings were evaluated using vibratory cavitation erosion tester. The failure mechanism due to cavitation erosion was explored using SEM study. The relationship of cavitation erosion behavior with variation in weight percentage (10%, 20%, and 30%) of reinforced particles in the composite clad was also explored. It has been observed that with an increase in the weight percentage of WC particles, the cavitation erosion rates decreased drastically initially (37.9%) and, but later significant change was not observed (4.89%, 2.44%). Eroded surface study revealed that with increase in the weight percentage of WC reinforcement the mode of damage changes from ductile to brittle. Further it was studied that the pits, crater, micro-cracks, and plastic deformation were the primary wear mechanisms.
Sneha Singh, Paramdeep Kaur, Diksha Aggarwal, Vinod Kumar, Kulbhushan Tikoo, Sandeep Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Elsevier BV
Ankush Sheoran, Komal, Jaspreet Kaur, Paramdeep Kaur, Jyoti Agarwal, Vinod Kumar, S. Bansal, K. B. Tikoo, and Sonal Singhal
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
SANDEEP BANSAL, SARBJEET KAUSHAL, DHEERAJ GUPTA, and VIVEK JAIN
World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd
In this study, Ni-Al2O3-based composite clads on SS-316 substrates using a microwave irradiation method have been developed. Microwave-processed clads were characterized using various nondestructive techniques to investigate microstructure, phase analysis, porosity assessment and measurement of microhardness. The findings of the microstructural analysis demonstrated the formation of solid, metallurgically bonded and defect-free clads with a thickness of approximately 970[Formula: see text][Formula: see text]m. X-ray diffraction (XRD) phase analysis study confirmed the existence of hard and intermetallic phases in the clad region. Composite clad region exhibited a low porosity value of [Formula: see text]1.3%. The average microhardness of the clad region was 3.63 times that of the substrate region. Further, cavitation erosion (CE) behavior of the developed clads was investigated using vibration CE test rig under various stand-off distances and immersion depths. CE results showed that the composite clads exhibited 6.9 times better erosion resistance than SS-316 substrate. CE resistance increased with an increase in stand-off distance and the depth of immersion.
Rajat Kumar, Hiralal Bhowmick, Dheeraj Gupta, and Sandeep Bansal
SAGE Publications
Nowadays, scientists and engineers are coming together enthusiastically to develop superior lightweight materials for tribological applications, such as hybrid aluminum metal matrix composites for the internal combustion engine components. In the present study, hybrid aluminum metal matrix composite has been fabricated with A390 (Al–Si) as the matrix material and SiC (15 wt%) and multiwalled carbon nanotube (0.5 wt%, 1.5 wt%, and 2.5 wt%) as hybrid reinforcements, by following the microwave sintering route (2.45 GHz, 900 W). Microstructure and porosity of fabricated hybrid aluminum metal matrix composite has been characterized using micrographs of the scanning electron microscope and optical microscope. This is followed by the Vickers hardness characterization and composition analysis by X-ray diffraction and Raman spectroscopy. Thereafter, a comprehensive tribological investigation is carried out for A390, Al + 15% SiC, Al + 15% SiC + 0.5% MWCNT, Al + 15% SiC + 1.5% MWCNT, and Al + 15% SiC + 2.5% MWCNT. The present study reveals that the addition of multiwalled carbon nanotube (MWCNT) in microwave sintered aluminum metal matrix composite has a significant effect on wear resistance and frictional response.
Sandeep Bansal, Jonty Mago, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
IOP Publishing
The current investigation aimed to study the cavitation erosion performance of the microwave synthesized NiCrSiC-5Al2O3 composite clad with a 900 W power multimode domestic microwave applicator of 2.45 GHz frequency. The clads were deposited on the austenitic grade stainless steel, namely AISI-316. The as-deposited composite clad’s microstructure, crystal structure, porosity, microhardness, and flexural strength were examined. Cavitation erosion study was done using the vibratory cavitation method at varying standoff distance (SOD)-(0.5 mm, 1 mm, 1.5 mm) and vibration amplitude (AMP)-(40 μm, 50 μm, 60 μm), keeping other parameters constant. The results had shown that the deposited NiCrSiC-5Al2O3 composite clad exhibited 1.20% porosity, 489.16 ± 47.95 HV0.3 microhardness, 264.91 ± 4.5 MPa flexural strength, and performed 3.5 times much better than the AISI-316 in terms of cavitation resistance. The least weight loss occurred at 1.5 mm SOD and 40 μm AMP, where the highest weight loss was observed at 0.5 mm SOD and 60 μm AMP. The erosion mechanism of the NiCrSiC-5Al2O3 composite clad surface was observed as plastic deformation followed by surface fatigue; the clad surface was eroded in the form of pits, craters, impingement marks, secondary cracks, and plastically deformed lips.
Jonty Mago, Sandeep Bansal, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
SAGE Publications
Surface modification is one of the most reliable solutions for protecting the material damage in hydraulic turbines due to cavitation phenomena. However, the conventional coating/cladding process has many drawbacks like high porosity, weak adhesion strength, and poor fracture toughness. In contrast, the cladding process with microwave hybrid heating can overcome these limitations. Hence, this study aims to develop the microwave processed composite clad of Ni-based alloy with 40% Cr3C2 (by wt.) on SS-316 substrate in the domestic microwave oven of 2.45 GHz frequency and 900 W power. The selection of the material system for this study was based on mitigating the effect of cavitation erosion. The thorough metallurgical and mechanical characterization of the developed composite clad was done. Microstructural characterization using scanning electron microscopy revealed that the developed composite clads had a uniform thickness of 600 µm and free from interfacial cracks and visible pores (measured porosity ∼1.67% – as per ASTM B276). Uniformly dispersed hexagonal and stripe type carbides precipitate in the Ni-based alloy matrix of the composite clad was observed through scanning electron microscopy images. X-ray diffraction analysis shows that various hard carbides (SiC, Ni3C, Cr3Ni2SiC, Cr7C3, and NiC) and intermetallic (Ni3Fe, Ni2Si, and Cr3Si) phases were formed during microwave heating. The microhardness, flexural strength, fracture toughness of the Ni-40Cr3C2 clads were evaluated. The results reveal that the composite clad possesses microhardness = 605 ± 80 HV0.3 (∼3 times SS-316), flexural strength = 813.23 ± 16.2 MPa, and fracture toughness = 7.44 ± 0.2 MPa√m. The appropriate value of these properties makes this composite clad suitable for cavitation erosion resistance application.
Sandeep Bansal, Jonty Mago, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
IOP Publishing
Abstract This study aims to develop cavitation erosion-resistant clads on stainless steel (SS-316) using the microwave cladding technique. Ni-based alloy powder (EWAC) was reinforced with tungsten carbide (10% by wt) powder to obtain composite clads. The cladding process was carried out in a domestic microwave applicator of 2.45 GHz frequency with 900 W power. The microstructure, crystal structure (phase identification and quantification), and microhardness of the developed clad were investigated with scanning electron microscopy (SEM), energy-dispersive x-ray spectroscopy (EDX), x-ray diffraction (XRD), and Vickers microhardness tester, respectively. It was found that the deposited clad has a uniform thickness of ∼520 μm, and the microstructure mainly consists of equally dispersed and agglomerated carbides in cellular like Ni-Matrix. XRD analysis reveals that the composite clad was composed of various intermetallic, carbide, and oxide phases. The EWAC + 10WC clad (625 ± 81 HV0.3) has a hardness ∼3.5 times higher than the stainless steel substrate (195 ± 15 HV0.3). The cavitation erosion behavior of the SS-316 and EWAC + 10WC clad was examined by using a vibratory cavitation test apparatus. The parametric cavitation erosion testing was conducted according to the Taguchi L9 orthogonal array (OA) to study the effects of variations in amplitude (AMP), immersion depth (ID), and standoff distance (SOD) on mass loss in SS-316 and composite clad. The parametric study results show that SOD was the most influential test parameter, followed by AMP and ID. SOD contributes more than 50% in the mass loss of SS-316 and clad specimens, whereas AMP and ID contribution was around 32%–37% and 7%–11%, respectively. The developed EWAC + 10WC clad performed ∼6.7 times better than the SS-316. Nevertheless, the SS-316 and EWAC + 10WC clad specimens got severely damage in the form of pits, craters, plastic deformation, lip formation, impingement marks, and secondary cracks.
Jonty Mago, Sandeep Bansal, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
SAGE Publications
Cavitation erosion is the primary cause of material failure of the hydroelectric power plant components. The rapid development in the advanced surface engineering techniques has provided an effective treatment solution for cavitation erosion. One such novel method is microwave cladding. Hence, the Ni–40Cr3C2 composite clad was deposited on austenitic stainless steel (SS-316) using a microwave cladding process in the present study. The processing was carried out in a domestic microwave oven of 2.45 GHz frequency and 900 W power. The developed clad was thoroughly characterized for the metallurgical and mechanical properties related to its behavior as a successful cavitation erosion resistance material, like microstructure, crystal structure, porosity, microhardness, flexural strength, and fracture toughness. The results showed that the stripe-type and agglomerated carbides were present in the Ni–40Cr3C2 clad. The developed composite clad consists of various carbides (SiC, Ni3C, Cr3Ni2SiC, Cr7C3, and NiC) and intermetallic phases (Ni3Fe, Ni2Si, and Cr3Si). Microhardness, flexural strength, and fracture toughness of the microwave-processed clad were observed to be 605 ± 80 HV0.3, 813.23 ± 16.2 MPa, and 7.44 ± 0.2 MPa√m, respectively. The microwave-processed composite clad performance in terms of cavitation erosion resistance was determined using the ultrasonic apparatus (ASTM-G32-17). The cavitation experiments were carried out according to Taguchi L9 orthogonal array, taking into account three parameters: standoff distance, amplitude, and immersion depth. The developed composite clad exhibited significant resistance (mass loss 7.6 times lesser as compared to SS-316) to cavitation erosion. ANOVA results showed the standoff distance as the most important factor followed by amplitude and immersion depth. Least cavitation resistance was observed at a smaller standoff distance, higher amplitude, and lower immersion depth. Linear regression equations were obtained to establish the correlation between parameters and cumulative mass loss. The microwave clad specimens tested at optimized test parameters were damaged in the form of fractured intermetallic, extruded lips, pits, and craters.
Komal, Sneha Singh, Sandeep Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Springer International Publishing
SANDEEP BANSAL, DHEERAJ GUPTA, and VIVEK JAIN
World Scientific Pub Co Pte Ltd
Microwave cladding is one of the latest surface engineering techniques, which has been used to improve the surface properties of a material. This technique overcomes almost all limitations of the existing methods. In this study, Ni-based+10% Cr3C2 composite clads have been developed in domestic microwave oven of 2.45-GHz frequency and 900-W power. The developed composite clads have been characterized using various standard mechanical and metallurgical techniques like SEM/EDS, XRD and Vickers microhardness tester. Cavitation erosion resistance of developed composite clads has also been examined at different parametric conditions. The microstructure analysis exhibits that the developed composite clads of 730-[Formula: see text]m thickness are free of cracks (solidification and interfacial) and less porous. The presence of various intermetallic and hard carbide phases like FeNi3, CrSi2, Cr3Ni2SiC, SiC and NiC is confirmed from the XRD analysis. The Vickers microhardness study reveals that the average microhardness of clad region is [Formula: see text] HV[Formula: see text]. The cavitation erosion study (at different parametric conditions using vibratory cavitation erosion testing) reveals that the developed composite clads perform much better under cavitation erosion environment than the SS-316 substrate. The stand-off distance is found to be the most dominating factor followed by amplitude and immersion depth.
Kanu Gupta, Komal, Nidhi, K. B. Tikoo, Vinod Kumar, Sandeep Bansal, Anupama Kaushik, and Sonal Singhal
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Ecofriendly and robust hybrid nanomaterials of pectin and nickel ferrite were succesfully employed for the adsorptive degradation of toxic dye molecules in waste water treatment.
Jonty Mago, Sandeep Bansal, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Jaspreet Kaur, Komal, Renu, Vinod Kumar, K. B. Tikoo, Sandeep Bansal, Anupama Kaushik, and Sonal Singhal
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sandeep Bansal, Dheeraj Gupta, and Vivek Jain
SAGE Publications
Hydropower plants are experiencing huge revenue losses due to the failure of hydro turbines caused by cavitation. Surface modification could be a feasible solution to tackle this problem. Microwave processing of metallic materials to coat/clad has gained popularity in recent years. In the current study, microwave exposure time by analyzing susceptor temperature is optimized to get sound clads. Nickel-based and Cr3C2-reinforced clad on SS-316 substrate is developed for cavitation erosion resistance. The clads have been developed in a domestic microwave oven of 2.45 GHz and 900 W. The Ni + 30% Cr3C2 developed clad has been characterized through various standard mechanical and metallurgical techniques like X-ray diffraction, scanning electron microscopy, energy-dispersive spectroscopy, Vicker’s micro-hardness, porosity measurement, and flexural study. The presence of various carbide and intermetallic phases Cr2Ni3, Cr7C3, CrSi, SiO2, and FeNi3 is confirmed from the X-ray diffraction pattern. The distribution of hard carbide phases into soft matrix is confirmed from the microstructural investigation. Vicker’s microhardness study confirms the enhanced average microhardness of the clad region by 2.5 times of the substrate. The analysis of porosity shows significantly less (0.98%) porosity. The flexural study of developed clads by using three-point bending test is evaluated and flexural strength and deformation index values of developed clads of 814 ± 11.5 MPa and 2.29 × 10−4 mm N−1 respectively are observed.
Ankush Sheoran, Jaspreet Kaur, Paramdeep Kaur, Vinod Kumar, K.B. Tikoo, Jyoti Agarwal, S. Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Elsevier BV
Sneha Singh, Paramdeep Kaur, Sandeep Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Atul Babbar, Ankit Sharma, Sandeep Bansal, Jonty Mago, and Varinder Toor
Elsevier BV
Ankita Goyal, Bhanvi Chawla, S. Bansal, K.B. Tikoo, V. Kumar, and Sonal Singhal
Elsevier BV
Ankita Goyal, Rajat Sharma, S. Bansal, K.B. Tikoo, V. Kumar, and Sonal Singhal
Elsevier BV
Surbhi Kapoor, Ankita Goyal, Sandeep Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
The dramatic enhancement in the catalytic performance with the incorporation of 1% bismuth into the cobalt ferrite lattice has been scrutinized for the oxidative degradation of hazardous dyes.
Rimi Sharma, Komal, Vinod Kumar, S. Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Elsevier BV
Ankita Goyal, S. Bansal, B. Chudasama, K. B. Tikoo, V. Kumar, and Sonal Singhal
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
Augmentation in the catalytic performance via incorporation of Al3+ ions into the lattice of spinel nanoferrites owing to the synergistic interactions among the metal ions present in the surface exposed catalytically active octahedral sites.
Charanjit Singh, Ankita Goyal, Rupal Malik, S. Bansal, and Sonal Singhal
Elsevier BV