Razor blades are made of martensitic stainless steels, so if the effect is to reduce the retained austenite, it should be valid for razor blades as well as tool steels.
On the possibility of other effects, I worked for many years in the ion implantation field. In ion implantation, atoms (actually, ions) bombard a surface with enough energy to penetrate a tenth of a micron or so, forming a new compound or alloy on the surface. The process results in a large increase in wear resistance -- two to three-fold. For many years, this increase was attributed to the surface alloying. The problem here is that the surface layer is very thin, so thin that it is removed in the first millisecond or so in a normal metal cutting application. Moreover, implantation with inert gases also produces improvements in wear resistance. Nonetheless, this remained the explanation given even in scientific meetings for over twenty years, until Russian researchers looked closely at the situation. They were able to discern changes in the microstruture caused by the bombardment down to hundreds of microns, with a region ten to twenty microns thick having high concentration of helical dislocations. The effects were very similar to those observed in a metal that has been deformed. Further, the improved wear resistance was found to depend on the depth of the helical dislocation structure, and independent of the thickness of the alloyed layer.
We looked at this issue from the stress point of view, found significant stress and strain changes induced by the ion bombardment. The strains were for the most part increased, but stresses varied depending on ion species. We found correlation between the strain increase and wear increase. In metals, we could not find a correlation between stress and wear resistance.
While these studies were carried out a decade ago, widely presented at technical meetings, with numerous articles in refereed journals, there are still practitioners that claim that the increased wear resistance is related to the alloying affect. So do not be surprised if those selling cryogenic processing don't have the foggiest idea of how it works.
Jim Treglio
Molecular Metallurgy, Inc.