US2159231A - Producing nickel alloy articles - Google Patents

Producing nickel alloy articles Download PDF

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US2159231A
US2159231A US81022A US8102236A US2159231A US 2159231 A US2159231 A US 2159231A US 81022 A US81022 A US 81022A US 8102236 A US8102236 A US 8102236A US 2159231 A US2159231 A US 2159231A
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nickel
articles
powder
per cent
iron
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US81022A
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Schlecht Leo
Schubardt Walter
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IG Farbenindustrie AG
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IG Farbenindustrie AG
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C1/00Making non-ferrous alloys
    • C22C1/04Making non-ferrous alloys by powder metallurgy
    • C22C1/0433Nickel- or cobalt-based alloys
    • YGENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC
    • Y10STECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
    • Y10S428/00Stock material or miscellaneous articles
    • Y10S428/922Static electricity metal bleed-off metallic stock
    • Y10S428/9265Special properties
    • Y10S428/928Magnetic property

Definitions

  • the said articles being difierent from, and superior to, any metallic articles of substantially the same composition which have been known prior to the present invention.
  • articles is used in a broad sense including not only worked pieces of nickel alloys, but also coherent lumps of more or less irregular shape which may serve for making worked pieces therefrom, but is not meant to include nickel alloys in the form of coarse or fine powder.
  • this invention relates to articles consisting of nickel alloys, especially those with iron, chromium, manganese, copper or severalof these elements.
  • nickel articles Prior to the present invention, nickel articles have been prepared mainly from the so-called cube-nickel" or from the small nickel balls prepared by the Mond process.
  • Cube-nickel is preparedby intimately mixing nickel oxide and carbon, making the mass into cubes and heating to a reduction temperature.
  • the resulting nickel contains copper and at least from 0.2 to 0.3 per cent of carbon and often further impurities.
  • it In order to make nickel articles from this material, it must be subjected to a nickel used as initial material which, moreover,
  • Metallic nickel may also be produced by elec trolyzing solutions of nickel salts.
  • the resulting nickel can as a rule be worked into nickel articles only by a melting operation which is attended not only with the disadvantages discussed above, but with the further drawback that the nickel contains substantial amounts of hydrogen so that large amounts of gas are evolved during the melting operation giving rise to an article with more or less great cavities and having a low mechanical strength.
  • Nickel is also known commercially in a pulverulent form. Such nickel may be obtained by the reduction of finely divided nickel oxide by means of reducing gases such as hydrogen.
  • Nickel obtained by the thermal decomposition of nickel carboyl in the free space of a heated vessel is characterized by being a fine powder. Analysis shows that it is free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus, and that it contains less than 0.002 per cent of sulphur. Its carbon content is usually very low, for example up to 0.03 per cent, though in some cases it may amount to 0.2 per cent or even more. It is this material that we make use of according to our present invention.
  • Nickel articles are obtained by our process from this material which are characterized by the following properties: They contain at least 99.9 per cent of nickel, are free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorous and do not contain more than 0.03- per cent of carbon and not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur. Asa result ofthis extreme purity, our new nickel articles can be welded without any difliculty,
  • our new nickel articles are further characterized by a particularly high softness or ductility, whereby they are easily worked in the cold as well as in the warm. They are particularly adapted for being stamped or rolled without suffering from fissures or cracks.
  • our new nickel articles are eminently suitable, for example for use as anodes for electroplating with nickel, since the solutions remain sufliciently pure for a long time and the nickel precipitate produced on the cathode is more uniform, and for the production of nickel wire, forthe construction of thermionic valves and .the like, since no occluded gases or other noxious substances are given off in vacuo.
  • alloys in accordance with the present invention.
  • These alloys contain, in addition to nickel, one or more of the metals iron, chromiu copper and manganese. They are further characterized by a sulphur content of less than 0.002 per cent and a carbon content of less than 0.3 per cent, preferably below 0.2 per cent. They possess a high mechanical strength so that they can be rolled in the cold and, especially in the case of alloys containing iron, excellent magnetic and electric properties.
  • the iron content usually ranges between 40 and 75 per cent; the content in manganese in the case of nickelmanganese alloys usually ranges between 0.1 and 2 or 3 per cent, whilein the case of nickel chromium alloys the chromium content ranges as a rule between 15 and 25 per cent. It should be understood, however, that percentages outside these ranges may be used in. some cases.
  • the condition of the particles of the nickel powder to be treated In determining the conditions necessary for said sintering treatment, due regard must be had to the condition of the particles of the nickel powder to be treated. It is not only necessary that the nickel powder should correspond to the chemical compositionindicated above, but regard must also be had to the average size of the particles which should not exceed 10 mu and preferably range between 0.5 and 5 mu. The weight of 1 liter of the powder should preferably be between 3 and 4 kilograms.
  • the nickel powder contains more carbon -than indicated above, i. e. more than 0.03 per cent, it must either be subjected to a preliminary heating together with a nickel powder which is free from carbon but contains suflicient oxygen to combine with the carbon, or the sintering by heat is conducted under such conditions that the carbon is removed.
  • the alloy metals must also be as pure as possible.
  • the average size of their particles should not exceed mu in order to produce articles of a sufliciently high mechanical strength.
  • the sintering by heat according to the present invention is efiected by subjecting the metallic powder'to the action of high temperatures below the melting point of any constituent thereof, which treatment is preferably carried out in an atmosphere of inert or reducing gas in order to avoid oxidation of the metal.
  • the temperature should be at least 300 C. and preferably ranges up to about 1200 C.
  • the time necessary for effecting sintering depends largely on the temperature employed. Thus, when working at 500 C., the time required will be from 1 to 8 days, and at 700- C. only from 3 to 36 hours will be required. However, the time required for sinterlng will in any case-be much longer than is necessary for removing car-.
  • bon and oxygen contained in the nickel which can be freed from said impurities by heating for example to600 C. in 15 minutes or to 700 C. in 10 minutes.
  • the heatingfto sintering temperature is preferably conducted slowly, because the heat conductivity of the metallic powder is low and too rapid heating of the mass might therefore lead to sintering of the outer portions of the mass only while the interior does not yet sinter; thereby cracks might be formed in the mass..
  • the mass may be subjected tothe action of mechanical pressure, for example by pressing it by means of a suitable piston.
  • the mechanical pressure applied may be as low as 300 kilograms per square centimeter. How-, ever, we prefer to employ higher pressures of the order of several thousand kilograms and, may use pressures as high as 16,000 kilograms per square centimeter or even more. 7 According to our present invention, the metallic powder can be worked up into large metal in-- gots, which can be easily converted into articles of the desired shape, forinstance by sawing, forging, rolling, stamping or filing. Articles of the desired shape, such as sheets, plates, tubes,
  • - rods or the like can also be produced directly by subjecting the nickel powder to the sintering process by heat and pressure treatment in suitable ioulds.
  • Theindividualparticlesofthenickel are preferably first brought into intimate mutual contact byshaking, tapping or ramming the powder into the mould.
  • the nickel material used. for the production of the metal articles is, as already mentioned, the finely divided nickel powder prepared directly in the form of powder from nickel carbonyl. Similarly, when a nickel-iron alloy is to be produced,
  • the iron powder is preferably that which is obtained directly in the form of powder from iron carbonyl.
  • the magnetic properties of the resulting metal articles can be altered extensively; thus a material very useful for the arming and winding of cables is obtained by mixing the nickel powder from nickel carbonyl with iron powder before it is worked up into chanical strength.
  • the said advantages are mainly due to the particularly uniform size and the ball-like or leaflet-like form of the particles of the nickel prepared from nickel carbonyl.
  • the nickel powder prepared in this manner is that it is non-pyrophoric and therefore is not liable to suffer ignition and does not cause danger to life and property in the working into nickel articles. Owing to the aforesaid properties of the nickel powder, the articles prepared according to the present invention have the great advantage of being, uniform throughout.
  • the nickel alloy articles according to our present invention for cores for electromagnets or the like, especially such as are operated with high frequency currents, without' suitably subdividing them by arrangement in plates or the like, because they may give rise to considerable eddy current losses due to their being free from insulating inclusions, such as oxidic layers on the particles of the nickel powder.
  • Thefollowing examples will further illustrate the nature of the invention but the invention is not restricted to these examples. The parts are by weight.
  • Example 1 A mixture of nickel carbonyl and iron carbonyl containing nickel and iron in equal amounts by weight is evaporated and decomposed at 260 C. in the free space of a heated vessel. A metal powder is obtained which contains 48.8 per cent of nickel, 48.8 per cent of iron, 1.2 per cent of carbon and 1.2 per cent of oxygen..
  • this powder is moistened with water and dried at 150 C. It then contains 47.9 per cent of nickel, 47.9 per cent of .iron, 1.2 per cent of carbon and 3 per cent of oxygen.
  • 100 kilograms of the powder initially obtained are mixed with 80 kilograms of the powder en- 'riched in oxygen.
  • the mixture is filled into a mould made of refractory material and heated for 4 hours at 1200 C. while excluding air.
  • the sintered block is forged into bars which are rolled, while warm, into bands of 5 millimeters thickness.
  • the bands are rolled in the cold to a thickness of 1.2 millimeters, heated for 2 hours at 900 C. in an atmosphere of hydrogen, and further rolled in the cold to a thickness of 0.35 millimeter. They are then made into coils and heated for 3 hours at 1000 C. in an atmosphere of hydrogen.
  • the resulting material possesses an initial permeability of'5000, a maximum permeability of 65000 and a coercive power of 0.03
  • Example 3 99.5 kilograms of nickel powder obtained from nickel carbonyl and containing 0.03 per cent of carbon are mixed with 0.5 kilogram of man ganese powder and heated for 10 hours at 1200 C. in an atmosphere of dry hydrogen. The material is rolled into bars while hot and then quenched in cold water. The extensibility of the resulting material is at least 10 per cent higher than that of the material hitherto available in commerce which has substantially the same composition.
  • Example 4 60 parts of nickel powder obtained from nickel carbonyl are mixed with 40 parts of copper powder obtained,by'precipitation by means "of zinc dust from a copper sulphate solution. The mixture is heated for 8 hours at1000 C. in a current of hydrogen.
  • the sintered block which per cent greater than that of commercial Monel than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, and of at least one further metal from the group consisting of iron, chromium, copper and manganese, said further metal having an average size of the particles not exceeding mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the mixture of metal powders into a nickel alloy article, said consolidation being assisted by the application of mechanical pressure at a time following the beginning of the heating.
  • said powder being free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus, containing not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the powder into a nickel-iron alloy article, said consolidation being assisted by the application of mechanical pressure at a time following the beginning of the heating.
  • the process of producing nickel alloy articles containing not more than 0.3 per cent of carbon which comprises heating to a sintering temperature a mixture composed of a nickel powder obtained directly by the, thermal decomposition of nickel carbonyl, said nickel powder being free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus and containing not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, and of a substantial amount of at least one further metal from the group consisting of iron, chromium, copper and manganese, said further metal having an average size of the particles not exceeding 100 mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the mixture of metal powders into a nickel alloy article, said consolidation being completed by rolling the sintered material to obtain a solid body.
  • the process of producing nickel articles containing not more than 0.3 per cent of carbon which comprises heating to a sintering temperature a mixture composed of a nickel alloy powder obtained directly by the thermal decomposition of nickel carbonyl, said nickel powder being free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus and containing not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, and of a substantial amount of at least one further metal from the group consisting of iron, chromium, copper and manganese, said further metal having an average size of the particles not exceeding 100 mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the mixture of metal powders into a nickel alloy article, said consolidation being completed by rolling the sintered material to obtain a solid and compact body.
  • Nickel alloy articles obtained by a process as claimed in claim 1, containing nickel and at least one of the metals iron, chromium, copper and manganese, less than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and less than 0.3 per cent of carbon, and capable of being rolled in the cold.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
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  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Powder Metallurgy (AREA)

Description

Patented May 23, 1939 UNITED STATES PRODUCING NICKEL ALLOY ARTICLES Leo Schlecht, Ludwigshaien-on-the-Rhine, and Walter Schubardt, Mannheim, Germany, assignors to I. G. Farbenindustrie Aktiengescllschaft, Frankfort-on-thc-Main, Germany No Drawing. Original application October 25,
1934, Serial No. 749,922.
Divided and this anplication May 21, 1936, Serial No. 81,022. In Germany March 26, 1928 Claims.
, the said articles being difierent from, and superior to, any metallic articles of substantially the same composition which have been known prior to the present invention. Throughout this application and the appended claims the termarticles" is used in a broad sense including not only worked pieces of nickel alloys, but also coherent lumps of more or less irregular shape which may serve for making worked pieces therefrom, but is not meant to include nickel alloys in the form of coarse or fine powder.
More particularly, this invention relates to articles consisting of nickel alloys, especially those with iron, chromium, manganese, copper or severalof these elements.
In order that our invention and the advantages inherent therewith may be fully understood it may be convenient first to give a brief summary of the prior art and the disadvantages .which are experienced in the known processes.
Prior to the present invention, nickel articles have been prepared mainly from the so-called cube-nickel" or from the small nickel balls prepared by the Mond process.
Cube-nickel is preparedby intimately mixing nickel oxide and carbon, making the mass into cubes and heating to a reduction temperature.
The resulting nickel contains copper and at least from 0.2 to 0.3 per cent of carbon and often further impurities. In order to make nickel articles from this material, it must be subjected to a nickel used as initial material which, moreover,
is impure itself.
The small nickel balls from the Mond process. 7
i. e. a process in which nickel carbonyl is therv mally decomposed on small nickel particles kept in continuous movement, also require a melting operation for being worked into nickel articles, in which melting process the same disadvantages are experienced 'as'in the case of cubenickel.
Metallic nickel may also be produced by elec trolyzing solutions of nickel salts. The resulting nickel can as a rule be worked into nickel articles only by a melting operation which is attended not only with the disadvantages discussed above, but with the further drawback that the nickel contains substantial amounts of hydrogen so that large amounts of gas are evolved during the melting operation giving rise to an article with more or less great cavities and having a low mechanical strength.
Nickel is also known commercially in a pulverulent form. Such nickel may be obtained by the reduction of finely divided nickel oxide by means of reducing gases such as hydrogen.
When such pulverulent nickel is melted, the same disadvantages are experienced as in the melting processes referred to above.
Attempts have also been made to produce metallic articles from more or less finely subdivided metals by a method which avoids the melting operation'and the contamination of the material involved therein and consists in subjecting the While such a sintering operation has been carried through successfully for example with iron, it has been a complete failure in the case of nickel. Even when attempting to produce nickel articles by consolidating by sintering .the pulverulent nickel of highest purity which is. ob-
tained by the reduction of nickel oxide, products are obtained which are sintered only incompletely and thus have a low mechanical strength which is insuflicient for practical purposes. ample, when such nickel articles are subjected to a rolling or forging treatment, they are always liable to become destroyed by cracks or fissures.
All past experiences have thus led to the conclusion that it is absolutely necessary, in order to obtain nickel articles of sufficiently high strength, to have small amounts of manganese or magnesium present therein. Even the socalled pure nickel articles of commerce,.such as are widely used in the chemical industry as well as for household and other purposes, never consist of pure nickel, but always contain only up to 98 or 99 per cent of nickel and in addition thereto manganese, and often also magnesium, copper and cobalt.
These additions as well as carbon and sulphur tend to reduce the resistance of the nickel articles to corrosion.
The aforesaid impurities of commercial nickel articles not only lead to the disadvantages referred to in the foregoing, but they involve the 'oxide.
further drawback that nickel could hitherto be welded only with difliculty, if at all, and the welding seams were often very brittle due to occluded gases and in any case of inferior strength.
Similar considerations apply, of course, to alloys of nickel, more particularly with iron, chromium, larger amounts of manganese, copper, or several of these metals. All alloys of this kind hitherto available in commerce have been obtained by way of a melting operation.
In the course of the last years, finely subdivided nickel has become commercially available which is produced by thermally decomposing nickel carbonyl in the free space of a vessel heated to decomposition temperature, for example in accordance with the U. S. Patent No. 1,759,661. This nickel is of about the same degree of purity as the nickel obtained by the reduction of nickel It has therefore hitherto been assumed that the nickel obtained from nickel carbonyl would have the same properties as the latter kind of nickel, and it has been converted into nickel articles or nickel alloy articles exclusively by the method of melting.
It was therefore highly surprising when we discovered that the nickel obtained from nickel carbonyl constitutes an excellent material for the production of metal articles by the sintering method, provided certain precautions are taken which we shall explain below. It is this discovery that, the invention disclosed in our application for patent Ser. No. 749,922, filed October 25, 1934, and the invention described in the present specification whichis a division froni'the said application for patent are based upon.
Nickel obtained by the thermal decomposition of nickel carboyl in the free space of a heated vessel is characterized by being a fine powder. Analysis shows that it is free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus, and that it contains less than 0.002 per cent of sulphur. Its carbon content is usually very low, for example up to 0.03 per cent, though in some cases it may amount to 0.2 per cent or even more. It is this material that we make use of according to our present invention.
Pure nickel articles are obtained by our process from this material which are characterized by the following properties: They contain at least 99.9 per cent of nickel, are free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorous and do not contain more than 0.03- per cent of carbon and not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur. Asa result ofthis extreme purity, our new nickel articles can be welded without any difliculty,
and the welding seams have the same mechanical strength as they remaining portions of the material. Our new nickel articles are further characterized by a particularly high softness or ductility, whereby they are easily worked in the cold as well as in the warm. They are particularly adapted for being stamped or rolled without suffering from fissures or cracks. In view of their quite peculiar and outstanding properties, our new nickel articles are eminently suitable, for example for use as anodes for electroplating with nickel, since the solutions remain sufliciently pure for a long time and the nickel precipitate produced on the cathode is more uniform, and for the production of nickel wire, forthe construction of thermionic valves and .the like, since no occluded gases or other noxious substances are given off in vacuo.
The same kind of nickel is made use of for the production of alloys in accordance with the present invention. These alloys contain, in addition to nickel, one or more of the metals iron, chromiu copper and manganese. They are further characterized by a sulphur content of less than 0.002 per cent and a carbon content of less than 0.3 per cent, preferably below 0.2 per cent. They possess a high mechanical strength so that they can be rolled in the cold and, especially in the case of alloys containing iron, excellent magnetic and electric properties.
In the case of nickel-iron alloys the iron content usually ranges between 40 and 75 per cent; the content in manganese in the case of nickelmanganese alloys usually ranges between 0.1 and 2 or 3 per cent, whilein the case of nickel chromium alloys the chromium content ranges as a rule between 15 and 25 per cent. It should be understood, however, that percentages outside these ranges may be used in. some cases.
We shall now proceed to explain'in detail the process by which the new metal articles according to the present invention are produced. This process has been disclosed in our application for patent Ser. No. 348,113, filed March 18, 1929, of which parent application Ser. No. 749,922 is a continuation in part. As has been set forth in the said application, we have found that nickel or nickel alloy articles far superior to those hitherto known are obtained by subjecting nickel powder obtained directly by the thermal decomposition of nickel carbonyl, to a sintering treatment by heat accompanied or followed by a mechanical pressure treatment such as rolling or forging.
In determining the conditions necessary for said sintering treatment, due regard must be had to the condition of the particles of the nickel powder to be treated. It is not only necessary that the nickel powder should correspond to the chemical compositionindicated above, but regard must also be had to the average size of the particles which should not exceed 10 mu and preferably range between 0.5 and 5 mu. The weight of 1 liter of the powder should preferably be between 3 and 4 kilograms.
When the nickel powder contains more carbon -than indicated above, i. e. more than 0.03 per cent, it must either be subjected to a preliminary heating together with a nickel powder which is free from carbon but contains suflicient oxygen to combine with the carbon, or the sintering by heat is conducted under such conditions that the carbon is removed.
The alloy metals must also be as pure as possible. The average size of their particles should not exceed mu in order to produce articles of a sufliciently high mechanical strength.
Regard must also be had to the surface condition of the metallic particles to be sintered. It will be readily understood that the said particles combine the more readily with each other, the less their surface is contaminated, for example with metallic oxides. Even an extremely thin superficial layer of metallic oxides may exert a great influence in this respect.
The sintering by heat according to the present invention is efiected by subjecting the metallic powder'to the action of high temperatures below the melting point of any constituent thereof, which treatment is preferably carried out in an atmosphere of inert or reducing gas in order to avoid oxidation of the metal. In this heat treatment the temperature should be at least 300 C. and preferably ranges up to about 1200 C. The time necessary for effecting sinteringdepends largely on the temperature employed. Thus, when working at 500 C., the time required will be from 1 to 8 days, and at 700- C. only from 3 to 36 hours will be required. However, the time required for sinterlng will in any case-be much longer than is necessary for removing car-. bon and oxygen contained in the nickel which can be freed from said impurities by heating for example to600 C. in 15 minutes or to 700 C. in 10 minutes. The heatingfto sintering temperature is preferably conducted slowly, because the heat conductivity of the metallic powder is low and too rapid heating of the mass might therefore lead to sintering of the outer portions of the mass only while the interior does not yet sinter; thereby cracks might be formed in the mass.. Simultaneously with such heat treatment the mass may be subjected tothe action of mechanical pressure, for example by pressing it by means of a suitable piston. We prefer, however, to apply a treatment by mechanical pressure, as for example forging or rolling to the mass after it has been sintered and consolidated by heat.
The mechanical pressure applied may be as low as 300 kilograms per square centimeter. How-, ever, we prefer to employ higher pressures of the order of several thousand kilograms and, may use pressures as high as 16,000 kilograms per square centimeter or even more. 7 According to our present invention, the metallic powder can be worked up into large metal in-- gots, which can be easily converted into articles of the desired shape, forinstance by sawing, forging, rolling, stamping or filing. Articles of the desired shape, such as sheets, plates, tubes,
- rods or the like can also be produced directly by subjecting the nickel powder to the sintering process by heat and pressure treatment in suitable ioulds. Theindividualparticlesofthenickel are preferably first brought into intimate mutual contact byshaking, tapping or ramming the powder into the mould.
The nickel material used. for the production of the metal articles is, as already mentioned, the finely divided nickel powder prepared directly in the form of powder from nickel carbonyl. Similarly, when a nickel-iron alloy is to be produced,
the iron powder ispreferably that which is obtained directly in the form of powder from iron carbonyl.
By the addition of appropriate alloysubstances to the nickel powder the magnetic properties of the resulting metal articles can be altered extensively; thus a material very useful for the arming and winding of cables is obtained by mixing the nickel powder from nickel carbonyl with iron powder before it is worked up into chanical strength. The said advantages are mainly due to the particularly uniform size and the ball-like or leaflet-like form of the particles of the nickel prepared from nickel carbonyl. A
. further advantage of the nickel powder prepared in this manner is that it is non-pyrophoric and therefore is not liable to suffer ignition and does not cause danger to life and property in the working into nickel articles. Owing to the aforesaid properties of the nickel powder, the articles prepared according to the present invention have the great advantage of being, uniform throughout.
It should be noted that it is generally not lli very advantageous to use the nickel alloy articles according to our present invention for cores for electromagnets or the like, especially such as are operated with high frequency currents, without' suitably subdividing them by arrangement in plates or the like, because they may give rise to considerable eddy current losses due to their being free from insulating inclusions, such as oxidic layers on the particles of the nickel powder. Thefollowing examples will further illustrate the nature of the invention but the invention is not restricted to these examples. The parts are by weight.
Example 1 A mixture of nickel carbonyl and iron carbonyl containing nickel and iron in equal amounts by weight is evaporated and decomposed at 260 C. in the free space of a heated vessel. A metal powder is obtained which contains 48.8 per cent of nickel, 48.8 per cent of iron, 1.2 per cent of carbon and 1.2 per cent of oxygen..
A portion of this powder is moistened with water and dried at 150 C. It then contains 47.9 per cent of nickel, 47.9 per cent of .iron, 1.2 per cent of carbon and 3 per cent of oxygen.
100 kilograms of the powder initially obtained are mixed with 80 kilograms of the powder en- 'riched in oxygen. The mixture is filled into a mould made of refractory material and heated for 4 hours at 1200 C. while excluding air. The sintered block is forged into bars which are rolled, while warm, into bands of 5 millimeters thickness. The bands are rolled in the cold to a thickness of 1.2 millimeters, heated for 2 hours at 900 C. in an atmosphere of hydrogen, and further rolled in the cold to a thickness of 0.35 millimeter. They are then made into coils and heated for 3 hours at 1000 C. in an atmosphere of hydrogen. -The resulting material possesses an initial permeability of'5000, a maximum permeability of 65000 and a coercive power of 0.03
bands. Gauss.
Example 3 99.5 kilograms of nickel powder obtained from nickel carbonyl and containing 0.03 per cent of carbon are mixed with 0.5 kilogram of man ganese powder and heated for 10 hours at 1200 C. in an atmosphere of dry hydrogen. The material is rolled into bars while hot and then quenched in cold water. The extensibility of the resulting material is at least 10 per cent higher than that of the material hitherto available in commerce which has substantially the same composition.
Example 4 60 parts of nickel powder obtained from nickel carbonyl are mixed with 40 parts of copper powder obtained,by'precipitation by means "of zinc dust from a copper sulphate solution. The mixture is heated for 8 hours at1000 C. in a current of hydrogen. The sintered block which per cent greater than that of commercial Monel than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, and of at least one further metal from the group consisting of iron, chromium, copper and manganese, said further metal having an average size of the particles not exceeding mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the mixture of metal powders into a nickel alloy article, said consolidation being assisted by the application of mechanical pressure at a time following the beginning of the heating.
2. The process of producing nickel-iron alloy articles containing not more than 0.3 per cent of carbon which comprises heating to a sintering temperature a nickel-iron powder obtained directly by the thermal decomposition of a mix-.
ture of nickel carbonyl and iron carbonyl, said powder being free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus, containing not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the powder into a nickel-iron alloy article, said consolidation being assisted by the application of mechanical pressure at a time following the beginning of the heating.
3. The process of producing nickel alloy articles containing not more than 0.3 per cent of carbon which comprises heating to a sintering temperature a mixture composed of a nickel powder obtained directly by the, thermal decomposition of nickel carbonyl, said nickel powder being free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus and containing not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, and of a substantial amount of at least one further metal from the group consisting of iron, chromium, copper and manganese, said further metal having an average size of the particles not exceeding 100 mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the mixture of metal powders into a nickel alloy article, said consolidation being completed by rolling the sintered material to obtain a solid body.
4. The process of producing nickel articles containing not more than 0.3 per cent of carbon which comprises heating to a sintering temperature a mixture composed of a nickel alloy powder obtained directly by the thermal decomposition of nickel carbonyl, said nickel powder being free from manganese, magnesium, copper, silicon and phosphorus and containing not more than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and having an average size of the particles not exceeding 10 mu, and of a substantial amount of at least one further metal from the group consisting of iron, chromium, copper and manganese, said further metal having an average size of the particles not exceeding 100 mu, said heating operation resulting in consolidation of the mixture of metal powders into a nickel alloy article, said consolidation being completed by rolling the sintered material to obtain a solid and compact body.
5. Nickel alloy articles obtained by a process as claimed in claim 1, containing nickel and at least one of the metals iron, chromium, copper and manganese, less than 0.002 per cent of sulphur and less than 0.3 per cent of carbon, and capable of being rolled in the cold.
' LEO SCHLECHT.
WALTER SCHUBARDT.
US81022A 1934-10-25 1936-05-21 Producing nickel alloy articles Expired - Lifetime US2159231A (en)

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Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2516058A (en) * 1943-09-30 1950-07-18 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Apparatus for plating of metals
US2699458A (en) * 1950-05-11 1955-01-11 Basf Ag Porous sintered metal bodies for a storage battery
US2700062A (en) * 1950-04-20 1955-01-18 Basf Ag Negative electrode for accumulators with alkaline electrolytes
US2736409A (en) * 1950-11-16 1956-02-28 Vickers Inc Magnetic fluid mixture clutch containing iron and nickel particles
US2987778A (en) * 1956-08-03 1961-06-13 Int Nickel Co Production of metal strip from metal powders
US3061917A (en) * 1959-02-09 1962-11-06 Pall Corp Method of mending filter elements and product thereof
US3256088A (en) * 1962-11-09 1966-06-14 Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd Process for desulphurizing metal and metal alloy particles
US3268368A (en) * 1963-10-21 1966-08-23 Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd Process for the production of wrought nickel strip and sheet of low hardness
US4198234A (en) * 1972-11-10 1980-04-15 Brico Engineering Sintered metal articles
US4455167A (en) * 1983-07-05 1984-06-19 Mpd Technology Corporation Nickel-zinc dust-iron-nickel powder pigment system

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2516058A (en) * 1943-09-30 1950-07-18 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Apparatus for plating of metals
US2700062A (en) * 1950-04-20 1955-01-18 Basf Ag Negative electrode for accumulators with alkaline electrolytes
US2699458A (en) * 1950-05-11 1955-01-11 Basf Ag Porous sintered metal bodies for a storage battery
US2736409A (en) * 1950-11-16 1956-02-28 Vickers Inc Magnetic fluid mixture clutch containing iron and nickel particles
US2987778A (en) * 1956-08-03 1961-06-13 Int Nickel Co Production of metal strip from metal powders
US3061917A (en) * 1959-02-09 1962-11-06 Pall Corp Method of mending filter elements and product thereof
US3256088A (en) * 1962-11-09 1966-06-14 Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd Process for desulphurizing metal and metal alloy particles
US3268368A (en) * 1963-10-21 1966-08-23 Sherritt Gordon Mines Ltd Process for the production of wrought nickel strip and sheet of low hardness
US4198234A (en) * 1972-11-10 1980-04-15 Brico Engineering Sintered metal articles
US4455167A (en) * 1983-07-05 1984-06-19 Mpd Technology Corporation Nickel-zinc dust-iron-nickel powder pigment system

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