Abstract:
The present work develops an explicit dynamic finite element model of soil–disc interaction for a notched harrow disc, aiming to quantify how APS coatings, soil type and disc–soil friction influence stresses in the disc and surrounding soil. The model reproduces a four-gang offset harrow operating at 7 km/h, 0.15 m working depth, with 18°disc angle and 15° tilt angle, and compares an uncoated steel disc with three APS-coated variants (P1 Metco 71NS, P2 Metco 136F, P3 Metco 45C-NS). Mechanical properties of the substrate and coatings are obtained from micro-indentation tests and introduced via a bilinear steel model and Johnson–Cook plasticity for the coatings, while disc–soil friction coefficients are calibrated from microscratch measurements. Soil behaviour is described using the AUTODYN Granular model for four representative agricultural soils, spanning sandy loam to saturated heavy clay. Results show that the uncoated disc develops von Mises stresses in the disc–soil contact region of ≈150–220 MPa, with intermediate-stiffness soils being most critical. APS coatings significantly alter both the level and distribution of stresses: P2, the stiffest ceramic, yields the highest stresses (≈421–448 MPa), P1 keeps stresses near the baseline while shielding the substrate through extended plastic zones, and P3 provides an intermediate, more uniformly distributed stress regime. Increasing disc–soil friction systematically amplifies von Mises stresses in the contact region, especially for P2. Overall, the calibrated explicit model captures the coupled influence of soil properties, coating stiffness and friction, and indicates that P1 is better suited for light-to-medium soils, P3 offers the most balanced response in medium-to-stiff soils, whereas P2 should be reserved for highly abrasive conditions and used with caution in cohesive soils.