US2736651A - Zirconium ternary alloys - Google Patents

Zirconium ternary alloys Download PDF

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US2736651A
US2736651A US451076A US45107654A US2736651A US 2736651 A US2736651 A US 2736651A US 451076 A US451076 A US 451076A US 45107654 A US45107654 A US 45107654A US 2736651 A US2736651 A US 2736651A
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alloys
zirconium
tin
strength
temperature
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Arthur D Schwope
Chubb Walston
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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C16/00Alloys based on zirconium
    • 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
    • Y10S376/00Induced nuclear reactions: processes, systems, and elements
    • Y10S376/90Particular material or material shapes for fission reactors

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  • the present invention is concerned with zirconium base alloys and particularly with zirconium-tin base ternary a oys.
  • novel zirconium base ternary alloys containing tin and a third metal from the group consisting of aluminum and the members of the V-B group of the periodic table, namely, vanadium, niobium and tantalum have desirable strength characteristics at high temperatures and have low thermal-neutron capture cross sections.
  • the tin component of these ternary alloys may range from about 1 to 6 w/o (weight percent) and the third component of the zirconium-tin alloys from 0.1 to 4 w/o.
  • Zirconium is a transition element, characterized by an incomplete inner shell of d electrons and an allotropic transformation at 865 C., transforming from a hexag-. onal crystal structure into a high-temperature body-centered cubic structure.
  • the primary effect of the small addition of a group V-B element is to depress this transformation temperature, while tin and aluminum have a tendency to increase this temperature.
  • tin and aluminum may be regarded as stabilizers of the alpha phase of zirconium alloys, and the group V-B elements as beta phase stabilizers.
  • the hardness at elevated temperatures is controlled largely by the beta stabilizers present, and the softening temperature is a characteristic of the amount of alpha stabilizers present.
  • the beta stabilizers merely change the hardness at the softening temperature. Therefore superior high-temperature alloys are obtained, as in the present alloys which contain a V-B group type element, by including a small amount of a beta stabilizer and a larger amount of an alpha stabilizer.
  • the resultant alloy has a high softening temperature, and is easily fabricated at high temperatures.
  • the alloys may be produced by conventional methods.
  • the alloys were prepared by drilling holes in a piece of metallic zirconium, putting suitable quantities of the two minor metal components into these holes and then filling the holes with zirconium chips.
  • Zirconium pieces formed in this manner were then heated in a graphite crucible by highfrequency induction at an absolute pressure of less than 10 microns of mercury. A charge of about 200 grams was melted in each case; the crucible was first charged with about half this quantity and only after this portion had melted was there added the remainder of the charge. The melted alloy was then allowed to cool slowly. The ingots obtained thereby weighed between and grams, part of the material having been taken up by the graphite of the crucible.
  • the alloys were also produced in arc-melting furnaces and satisfactory results were obtained by this method. During the melting in the graphite crucible, a small amount of carbon, up to about 0.5 w/o, was picked up by the alloys. A comparison of-the arc-melted alloys and the induction melted alloys shows a very definite trend in favor of arc-melting for improving the strength of the alloys at high temperatures. A comparison of the tensile strengths of zirconium-tin-aluminum alloys, one prepared by arc-melting and the other by induction-melting, is
  • the hardness was determined at three stages of the 2,736,651 Patented Feb. 28, 1956 3 alloys, namely, as cast, cold-rolled, and annealed, and the results are tabulated in the following table.
  • the specimens were tested at 500 C. in an argon atmosphere.
  • the speed of travel of the head of the testing machine was 0.02 inch per minute and an extensometer with a 1-inch gauge length and an accuracy of plus or minus 0.0001 inch per inch was used to measure extensions.
  • the extensometer was of the clip-on type with slide bars extending out of the heated area around the specimen.
  • the creep strength of alloys intended for high-temperature use is very important since it is a measure of the resistance to deformation under a steady load at an elevated temperature.
  • the test specimen is placed under a load and maintained at a particular temperature and the deformation is measured as a function of time.
  • the strain takes place in three successive stages: first, an initial rapid rate stage lasting from a few hours to a few days; second, a secondary reduced rate stage, nearly linear with time, lasting for a comparatively extended period; and third, a final rapid rate stage terminating in rupture.
  • zirconium-tin-aluminum and two of the zirconium-tin-vanadium alloys have particularly good yield strengths. It was also found that the zirconium-3.8% tin-1.0% niobium alloy has very good corrosion resistance when exposed to water at a temperature of 360 C. for long periods.
  • the three zirconiumtin-vanadium alloys having tin contents greater than 3.0 w/o also are corrosion-resistant to the attack of water at elevated temperatures.
  • a creep-resistant zirconium alloy characterized by tensile strength equal approximately to stainless steel at elevated temperatures comprising 2.8 weight percent tin, 0.46 weight percent aluminum and the balance zirconium.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Manufacture And Refinement Of Metals (AREA)

Description

-. ha r United States Fatent ZIRCONIUM TERNARY ALLQYS as represented by the United States Atomic Energy Commission No Drawing. Application August 19, 1954, Serial No. 451,076
2 Claims. (Cl. 75177) The present invention is concerned with zirconium base alloys and particularly with zirconium-tin base ternary a oys.
The development of nuclear reactors for power applications and of cyclotrons, linear accelerators and similar apparatus subject to radioactivity and high temperatures has caused a demand for novel alloys having good high-temperature strength and low neutron-absorption characteristics for structural members in such apparatus. The strength characteristics of these new alloys should be approximately as good as the characteristics of the stainless steels normally used in high-temperature devices, but the alloys should have a much lower neutron capture cross section than the stainless steels. Furthermore, the alloys must have sufficient workability to enable them to be fabricated into simple shapes.
While such elements as aluminum, lead, molybdenum, niobium, tantalum, tin, titanium and vanadium can all be used to strengthen zirconium eifectively in binary alloys, it has been found in general that reasonable strength can be achieved only by sacrificing ductility or by increasing the thermal-neutron capture cross section of the alloy to an undesirable extent. This results from the fact that no element has been found as yet which has the combination of a high solubility in alpha zirconium, a low thermal-neutron capture cross section, and a satisfactorily high boiling point.
It is an object of the present invention to provide novel alloys having strength characteristics at high temperatures approximately equivalent to that of stainless steel, but having neutron capture cross sections less than one-third that of stainless steel.
In accordance with the present invention, it has been found that novel zirconium base ternary alloys containing tin and a third metal from the group consisting of aluminum and the members of the V-B group of the periodic table, namely, vanadium, niobium and tantalum, have desirable strength characteristics at high temperatures and have low thermal-neutron capture cross sections. The tin component of these ternary alloys may range from about 1 to 6 w/o (weight percent) and the third component of the zirconium-tin alloys from 0.1 to 4 w/o.
Zirconium is a transition element, characterized by an incomplete inner shell of d electrons and an allotropic transformation at 865 C., transforming from a hexag-. onal crystal structure into a high-temperature body-centered cubic structure. The primary effect of the small addition of a group V-B element is to depress this transformation temperature, while tin and aluminum have a tendency to increase this temperature. Thus tin and aluminum may be regarded as stabilizers of the alpha phase of zirconium alloys, and the group V-B elements as beta phase stabilizers. It has been found that in ternary zirconium alloys the hardness at elevated temperatures is controlled largely by the beta stabilizers present, and the softening temperature is a characteristic of the amount of alpha stabilizers present. Within limits the beta stabilizers merely change the hardness at the softening temperature. Therefore superior high-temperature alloys are obtained, as in the present alloys which contain a V-B group type element, by including a small amount of a beta stabilizer and a larger amount of an alpha stabilizer. The resultant alloy has a high softening temperature, and is easily fabricated at high temperatures.
The alloys may be produced by conventional methods. For the experiments described below the alloys were prepared by drilling holes in a piece of metallic zirconium, putting suitable quantities of the two minor metal components into these holes and then filling the holes with zirconium chips. Zirconium pieces formed in this manner were then heated in a graphite crucible by highfrequency induction at an absolute pressure of less than 10 microns of mercury. A charge of about 200 grams was melted in each case; the crucible was first charged with about half this quantity and only after this portion had melted was there added the remainder of the charge. The melted alloy was then allowed to cool slowly. The ingots obtained thereby weighed between and grams, part of the material having been taken up by the graphite of the crucible.
The alloys were also produced in arc-melting furnaces and satisfactory results were obtained by this method. During the melting in the graphite crucible, a small amount of carbon, up to about 0.5 w/o, was picked up by the alloys. A comparison of-the arc-melted alloys and the induction melted alloys shows a very definite trend in favor of arc-melting for improving the strength of the alloys at high temperatures. A comparison of the tensile strengths of zirconium-tin-aluminum alloys, one prepared by arc-melting and the other by induction-melting, is
shown in Table I.
TABLE I 500 C. tensile properties of zirconium alloys 0.2%0fi- Ultimate Elonga- Reduc- Melting Alloy Analysis, set Yield Tensile tion in tron 1n Method w/o (Balance Zr) Strength, Strength, 1 in., Area,
p. s. i. p. s. i. percent percent;
Arc 3.4 Sn+0.5 Al--- 44, 200 55, 100 11 8 Induction--- 3.4 Sn+0.6 Al--- 32, 300 34, 400 4 6 The various novel alloys produced were tested at 500 C. for hardness, tensile strength and elongation, the characteristics primarily of interest for structural materials. For hardness tests the ingots of the alloys were first upset-forged and then hot-rolled at 1000 C. to yield 4;- inch thick slabs. Then about 0.01 inch of the slabs was shaved off from the surface on each side in order to remove any gaseous contaminants. The scalped slabs were then cold-rolled in reductions of approximately 0.002 inch per pass until a total reduction of from 20 to 30% had been obtained. The cold-rolled alloys were then annealed for one hour at 700 C. in a straightening press. The sheaths resulting thereby were again scalped 0.018 inch on one side and cut into testing specimens.
The hardness was determined at three stages of the 2,736,651 Patented Feb. 28, 1956 3 alloys, namely, as cast, cold-rolled, and annealed, and the results are tabulated in the following table.
4 TABLE IV Creep properties of zirconium alloys at 500 C.
TABLE II Apprgxi- 1 t l ma 6 o a Hardness data for zirconium alloys AHOY Analysis Wlo e g ss at Minimum Demmw (Balance Zr) S Creep tion,
Rate, Percent Rockwell A Hardness Percent/hr.
Alloy Analysis W10 1d 3 4 s +0 0 Al 1 25 500 0 011 920 17 r 0 11 As Cast Rolled Annealed 15,000 0.0012 1,032 2.7 g V 3.4 Sn+0.5 A13 10, 000 0. 00025 1, 400 0. 58
2.8 Sn +0.46 A 52 5s 50 $11 V---- 51 60 57 1 Induction-melted alloy. 5.4 Sn 0.6 V 55 62 58 2 Indicates failure in grip section. 4.3 Sn 1.0 V 63 60 57 a Arc-melted alloy. iii; i ii 2g 15 The improved characteristics of the alloys of this inven- 4.331 1 0.66 45 5s 55 tion for high-temperature reactor structural materials j Aljjjjjjjjjjj: may best be illustrated by comparing the yield strengths and thermal-neutron capture cross sections of these ma- For the tensile strength tests specimens 5 inches long, inch wide and 0.04 to 0.08 inch thick were prepared. The reduced section was 1.5 inches long and A inch wide. The specimens were tested at 500 C. in an argon atmosphere. The speed of travel of the head of the testing machine was 0.02 inch per minute and an extensometer with a 1-inch gauge length and an accuracy of plus or minus 0.0001 inch per inch was used to measure extensions. The extensometer was of the clip-on type with slide bars extending out of the heated area around the specimen.
The results of these tensile tests are shown in Table III. The tests were run in duplicate on each alloy and the results shown in Table III represent the average values obtained from these tests. The values listed under uni form elongation represent the total elastic and plastic deformation at maximum load. The tensile strengths of the zirconium-aluminum binary alloys are shown for purposes of comparison.
TABLE. III
Total 0.2% Ofiset Reduc- Zirconium Alloys, w/o Yield 3 93: 22? g g tion of (as analyzed) Strength, 1,0001) S i Percent Area,
1,000 p. s. 1. in 1 inch Percent The creep strength of alloys intended for high-temperature use is very important since it is a measure of the resistance to deformation under a steady load at an elevated temperature. The test specimen is placed under a load and maintained at a particular temperature and the deformation is measured as a function of time. As a general rule, the strain takes place in three successive stages: first, an initial rapid rate stage lasting from a few hours to a few days; second, a secondary reduced rate stage, nearly linear with time, lasting for a comparatively extended period; and third, a final rapid rate stage terminating in rupture. Both arc-melted and induction-melted zirconium-tin-ahuninum alloys were tested for creep strength and found to have very desirable characterlstlcs, as is shown by the results tabulated in the followmg table. The approximate minimum creep rate is a measure of the rate of extension of the samp e in The 0nd or steady stage.
terials with those of stainless steel and zirconium and zirconium-tin binary alloys. These ratios are shown in Table V.
TABLE V Properties 0 zirconium alloys compared with properties of stainless steel at 500 C.
'llllierinaleu ron Gross Yield Alloy Analysis, w/o (Balance Zr) ggg Section Strength Section Ratio Ratio barns/atom Stainless Steel, Type 347 2.86 l l lnduction Mclted Zirconium 0.20 0.070 0. 3 1.05 0. 20 0. 070 0. 40 1.35 0. 20 0. 070 0. 51 2. 0. 21 0. 073 0. 4. 0. 22 0. 077 0. 78 3. 0. 23 0. 080 0. 82 3. 0. 24 0. 084 0. 81 5. 0. 26 0. 091 1. 25 4. 0. 29 0. 101 0. 97 2. 0. 23 0. 080 0. 65 2. 0. 27 0. 004 0. 69 2. 0. 33 0. 0. 70 4. 0. 28 0. 098 0. 83
It will be noted that the zirconium-tin-aluminum and two of the zirconium-tin-vanadium alloys have particularly good yield strengths. It was also found that the zirconium-3.8% tin-1.0% niobium alloy has very good corrosion resistance when exposed to water at a temperature of 360 C. for long periods. The three zirconiumtin-vanadium alloys having tin contents greater than 3.0 w/o also are corrosion-resistant to the attack of water at elevated temperatures.
While the characteristics of exceptional strength at high temperatures, creep resistance and low cross section make these alloys particularly valuable for use in structural components of nuclear reactors of the high-temperature type, the high temperature strength and creep resistance also make these alloys valuable for structural components in other high-temperature applications such as aircraft engines, jet engines, chemical process equipment, etc.
It will be understood that this invention is not to be limited to the details given herein but that it may be modified within the scope of the appended claims.
What is claimed is:
1. A ternary zirconium base alloy containing 1 to 6 weight percent tin and 0.1 to 4.0 Weight percent aluminum.
2. A creep-resistant zirconium alloy characterized by tensile strength equal approximately to stainless steel at elevated temperatures comprising 2.8 weight percent tin, 0.46 weight percent aluminum and the balance zirconium.
Schwope et al.: Journal of Metals (November 1952), P e 1 0.

Claims (1)

1. A TERNARY ZIRCONIUM BASE ALLOY CONTAINING 1 TO 6 WEIGHT PERCENT TIN AND 0.1 TO 4.0 WEIGHT PERCENT ALUMINUM.
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Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2822302A (en) * 1956-01-16 1958-02-04 Radio Mfg Company Inc Non-emissive electrode
US2894866A (en) * 1958-01-21 1959-07-14 Marion L Picklesimer Method for annealing and rolling zirconium-base alloys
DE1149909B (en) * 1959-06-11 1963-06-06 Ass Elect Ind Zirconium alloy with high corrosion resistance
DE1155254B (en) * 1958-10-21 1963-10-03 Atomic Energy Authority Uk Zirconium alloys
EP0287888A1 (en) * 1987-04-23 1988-10-26 General Electric Company Corrosion resistant zirconium alloys

Non-Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Title
None *

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2822302A (en) * 1956-01-16 1958-02-04 Radio Mfg Company Inc Non-emissive electrode
US2894866A (en) * 1958-01-21 1959-07-14 Marion L Picklesimer Method for annealing and rolling zirconium-base alloys
DE1155254B (en) * 1958-10-21 1963-10-03 Atomic Energy Authority Uk Zirconium alloys
DE1149909B (en) * 1959-06-11 1963-06-06 Ass Elect Ind Zirconium alloy with high corrosion resistance
EP0287888A1 (en) * 1987-04-23 1988-10-26 General Electric Company Corrosion resistant zirconium alloys

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