US2920958A - Method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of chromium alloys - Google Patents

Method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of chromium alloys Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2920958A
US2920958A US623470A US62347056A US2920958A US 2920958 A US2920958 A US 2920958A US 623470 A US623470 A US 623470A US 62347056 A US62347056 A US 62347056A US 2920958 A US2920958 A US 2920958A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
powder
alloy
powders
sintering
phase
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US623470A
Inventor
Bergh Sven Sigvard
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Wargons AB
Original Assignee
Wargons AB
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Wargons AB filed Critical Wargons AB
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2920958A publication Critical patent/US2920958A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C33/00Making ferrous alloys
    • C22C33/02Making ferrous alloys by powder metallurgy
    • C22C33/0207Using a mixture of prealloyed powders or a master alloy

Definitions

  • the powder-metallurgical technique has become more and more important during the last decade. In many cases, for instance in the production of hard metals and pure high melting metals, the powder metallurgical method has proved to be the only practicable way to carry out a large scale economical manufacture. Powder metallurgy has also gained ground from the conventional steel-making processes as a number of parts of difierent steels and even pure soft iron nowadays are produced, to a great extent, by the pressing and sintering of powder and powder mixtures. A certain specified alloy may thus be prepared according to a large number of various recipes. The powders may consist of pure metals or metalloids, of alloys or even of finely disintegrated material of exactly the same composition as that of the finished body. Instead of metal powders, metal compounds such as oxides, hydrides and different salts may be used.
  • the pressing and sintering of a mixture of powders of the component metals may give a quite good physical homogeneity, for instance, if the major part of the powder mixture consists of a soft powder.
  • the chemical homogeneity will not be satisfactory even if the bodies are treated for a long time at high temperature. This is due to the comparatively low diffusion rates of such metals as chromium, nickel and molybdenum. The difiusion of chromium is obstructed by the so-called passive films, of which more will be said below.
  • Such powders most often s'idesiron-and chromium one or'moreof the following have poor compressibility, due, inter-alia, to the fact that alloyed metal particles ordinarily are harder and less deformable than pure metal particles.
  • the finished body will thus have a relatively high porosity even if very high loads are applied during the pressing.
  • the passive film which is formed on the surface of alloy particles containing more than about 1012% chromium, renders the growing together of the particles diflicult.
  • This drawback can be overcome in part by intermixing low meltingfluxing agents such as ferroboron, but such additions decrease the corrosion resistance and the mechanical properties (strength and ductility) of the finished body.
  • the present invention relates to a solution of the problem of producing by means of powder metallurgical methods alloys containing at least 10% chromium, and having good chemical as well as physical homogeneity.
  • the method according to the invention comprises mixing a soft powder containing at least one of the elements constituting the finished product with an alloy powder, the structure of which consists of at least 25% of at least one phase of the group consisting of the sigma, mu, xi and chi phases, pressing the powder mixture to form a body and sintering said body at a temperature below the melting point of the pulverulent components of the mixture.
  • the sigma phase has hitherto won a reputation only as an undesirable and injurious structural component of so-called stainless and, related grades of steel.
  • the sigma phase is'an intermetallic compound which can be formed by interalloying two or more of the metals Fe, Cr, Ni, Co, V,'Mn, Mo, W and others. Many of these intermetallic compounds have only quite lately been discovered. Tables 1-3 exemplify some of these compounds. Among other things they are characterized by a crystal structure wherein the atoms are arranged in very dense lattices.
  • alloy powder maycontain beelements: Ni, Mo, W, Cu, Mn, Ti,
  • alloys of the above table are of sigma type. Alloys conta ning phases of a closely related type and alloys containing mixtures of such phases and sigma phase are formed by the additional alloying of Nb and/or Ta.
  • the passive film is broken and thus the difiusion conditions are very good.
  • the iron particles become enriched with chromium and gradually transform from gamma to alpha phase. This transformationis accompanied by a volume increase which, taking place in the cavities of a stiff skeleton, leads to a gradual compression and diminution of the still present pores.
  • the powder admixed with the alloy '(sigma and related phase containing) powder should be soft.
  • the reason is that a sufiiciently high so-called green density and green strength (density and strength of pressed, not sintered, compacts.) thus obtained.
  • a high green density results in less shrinkage after sintering which also is an advantage.
  • the powder mixture which is to be pressed and sintered may also contain other component powders, e.g. a powder which does not contain sigma or related phase and which consists of one or more alloying elements.
  • the powder mixture should contain only a few component powders and preferably only two. Therefore, the soft powder as well as the alloy powder should be uniform, and the alloy powder should contain all the alloying elements and possibly also part of the soft powder metal.
  • the green density is favourably influenced by a suitable distribution of the grain size of the powders. From the point of view of diffusion it is desirable that the powders have substantially the same screen analysis. All powders should be fine-grained, the diffusion then requiring less time. It has been found suitable to use a particle size of 0.074 mm. (200 mesh) and preferably 0.044 mm. (325 mesh).
  • the soft powder should be as ductile as possible.
  • the chemical composition should be proportioned so that the mass ratio of soft powder to alloy powder is between 2 to l and 1 to 2. From the point of view of diffusion it is desirable that said ratio be about 1 t0 1, so that particles of both powders will with the greatest probability find themselves next to each other in the final mixture, whereby the diffusion distance will be the shortest possible.
  • a high proportion'of the hard alloy powder in the powder mixture is harmful as it accelerates the wearing of the pressing tools.
  • a high proportion of the soft powder component on the other hand results in an increased porosity of the body after sintering.
  • the soft powder most frequently used according to this invention is pure iron, e.g. electrolytic iron.
  • Other examples are low alloyed iron, pure nickel, pure cobalt or some binary or ternary alloys of said metals.
  • the alloy powder should contain all the sluggish diffusing elements to be contained in .the finished 'sintered steel. It should 'be uniform, i.e. eachparticle of the powder should have the same chemical composition.
  • the soft powder preferably consists of a single metal the alloy powder should thus contain all the other elements.
  • alloy powders are notnew in powder metallurgy.
  • master alloys especially when introducing into a sinteredv compact volatile elements such .as sulphur, or elements which easily form gaseous compounds, such as carbon.
  • Ferrochromium, ferro-molybdenur'n Land other ferroalloys which are added to powder mixtures when producing low alloyed steel are also examples of such master alloys.
  • master alloying should be carried out as far as possible keeping in mind thatthe master alloy must also have a defined metallographic structure containing at least 25. percent of sigma and/or related phase.
  • the alloy powder can be selected with such acomposition that the sigma or related phase is transformed to alpha phase merely by the temperature being raised above a certain limit or threshold value which is found at different levels for the various alloys.
  • Other alloys which are suitable for performing the method according to the invention contain a sigma or related phase which is stable to very high temperatures, in some cases up to the melting point, and the phase transformation in these cases is brought about by the diffusion of the soft metal into the particles of the alloy, whereby the critical chemical composition is successively attained and the phase transformation takes place. In such a case a very high density may be obtained, but longer time is required for complete diffusion.
  • the structure of the alloy powder is sigma and/or related phase. Specific gravity after sintering 7.38. Porosity 3.7%. Corrosion resistance in boiling 65% HNO (48 hrs.) in comparison with casting alloy of the same composition: Loss in weight in g./rn. h.Sintered metal 0.9; casting 0.6.
  • bodies consisting merely of the pure alloy powders used in the above examples were pressed and sintered.
  • the pressing and sintering conditions were the same as in the above examples.
  • the specific gravity of the bodies was determined before and after the sintering.
  • Alloy powder having the composition described in Example 2, i.e. containing 30% Cr, 30% Ni, the remainder being iron.
  • the structure is gamma. Specific gravity: before sintering 5.9; after sintering 6.6.
  • the signma or related phase containing powders have sintered to very dense bodies, in spite of the fact that it has not been possible to compress said powders, owing to their hardness, to a green density higher than 5.3.
  • the softer powders, which do not contain sigma or related phase, may be pressed to a higher green density of 5.85.9, but this is increased very insignificantly during sintering.
  • Example 10 the specific gravity of the body being sintered was also determined as a function of time. The following results were obtained.
  • Curves 1 and 2 show the pore volume (along 7 the ordinate) as function of the proportion (along the abscissa) I of alloy powder in the powder mixture, curve 1 referring to the bodies before sintering (green), and
  • Table 4 The table shows thesintered steel produced in accordance with the invention to be of equal merit, from the standpoint of corrosion resistance, with rolled stainless steel produced in the conventional way. This is, however, not the case with material produced; from atomized powder, the corrosion resistance of which is very poor. Both types of sintered steel have'mechanical properties which are somewhat inferior to those of rolled material but approximately equal to those of stainless castings.
  • a method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of alloys which comprises forming a mixture the major part of which consists of two powders one of which is a ductile metal powder and consists essentially of at least one of the metals of the group consisting of iron, cobalt and nickel and the other of which is an alloy curve 2 after sintering.
  • Curve 3 illustrates the decrease powder the structureof which consists of at least 25% 0f at least .one phase .of th'e group consisting-of the sigma, mu, xi and chi phases'fsaid powdehmixture containing at least 10% of chromium,'pressing said mixture to form a coherent, body'fand heating said.
  • thealloying powder has such a composition that the finished sintered body contains about 13% chromium and about nickel, the remainder being iron.
  • th alloy powder contains about 45% chromium, 20% nickel and 5% molybdenum, the remainder being iron.

Landscapes

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

Description

Jan. 12, 1960 s 5 BERGH 2,920,958
METH FOR E. POWDER METALLURGI L MA FACT E OF CHROMIUM ALLOY Filed Nov. 20, 1956 2 Sheets-Sheet 1 Candi as //\/VE/\ITUR Sven SLy/ard Berg/'1 12 m Jvfl zam fmlm I WW Jan. 12, 1960 5, BERGH 2,920,958
METHOD FOR THE POWDER METALLURGICAL MANUFACTURE OF CHROMIUM ALLOYS Filed Nov. 20. SL956 2 Sheets-Sheet 2 Fig. 2
0 g o [DO //V VENTOR Sven Siguard Bergh METHOD FOR THE POWDER lVflDTALLURGICAL MANUFACTURE'OF CHRONHUM ALLOYS Sven Sigvard Bergh, Vargou, Sweden, assign'or to Wargons Aktiebolag, Vargon, Sweden, a Swedish jointstock company Application November 20, 1956, Serial No. 623,470 Claims priority, application Sweden November 21, 1955 16 Claims. (Cl. 75-200) The present invention relates to the production of corrosion resistant metal bodies by pressing metal powder into compacts and sintering them.
The powder-metallurgical technique has become more and more important during the last decade. In many cases, for instance in the production of hard metals and pure high melting metals, the powder metallurgical method has proved to be the only practicable way to carry out a large scale economical manufacture. Powder metallurgy has also gained ground from the conventional steel-making processes as a number of parts of difierent steels and even pure soft iron nowadays are produced, to a great extent, by the pressing and sintering of powder and powder mixtures. A certain specified alloy may thus be prepared according to a large number of various recipes. The powders may consist of pure metals or metalloids, of alloys or even of finely disintegrated material of exactly the same composition as that of the finished body. Instead of metal powders, metal compounds such as oxides, hydrides and different salts may be used.
So-called stainless steel grades and high-alloy compositions related thereto have hitherto been manufactured by powder metallurgical methods to a limited extent only, in spite of the fact that such a production method would be particularly advantageous for these materials. Many high alloyed materials are difiicult and expensive to roll,
forge and form in the hot as well as in the cold. Furthermore, usually they are difiicult to machine by means of cutting tools, e.g. turning, milling and drilling tools.
The main reason for the restricted application of powder metallurgy in these cases is the fact that the bodies manufactured according to powder metallurgical methods hitherto known were not as resistant to corrosion as bodies manufactured in accordance with conventional steelmaking methods. For satisfactory corrosion resistance there is required, on the one hand, physical homogeneity (as low a grade of porosity as possible), and, on the other hand, chemical homogeneity. Up till now, the position in most cases has been that it is possible to realize only one of these conditions by a given method, provided moderate compacting pressures, sintering temperatures and sintering times are used.
In many cases the pressing and sintering of a mixture of powders of the component metals may give a quite good physical homogeneity, for instance, if the major part of the powder mixture consists of a soft powder. However, the chemical homogeneity will not be satisfactory even if the bodies are treated for a long time at high temperature. This is due to the comparatively low diffusion rates of such metals as chromium, nickel and molybdenum. The difiusion of chromium is obstructed by the so-called passive films, of which more will be said below.
Chemicalhomogeneity will of course be obtained by the pressing and sintering of a powder, every particle of which has the same composition as the desired body in its finished state.
However, such powders most often s'idesiron-and chromium one or'moreof the following have poor compressibility, due, inter-alia, to the fact that alloyed metal particles ordinarily are harder and less deformable than pure metal particles. The finished body will thus have a relatively high porosity even if very high loads are applied during the pressing.
The passive film, which is formed on the surface of alloy particles containing more than about 1012% chromium, renders the growing together of the particles diflicult. This drawback can be overcome in part by intermixing low meltingfluxing agents such as ferroboron, but such additions decrease the corrosion resistance and the mechanical properties (strength and ductility) of the finished body. I g
All of the methods hitherto used suffer from an essential drawback in that the powders are rather expensive.
The present invention relates to a solution of the problem of producing by means of powder metallurgical methods alloys containing at least 10% chromium, and having good chemical as well as physical homogeneity. The method according to the invention comprises mixing a soft powder containing at least one of the elements constituting the finished product with an alloy powder, the structure of which consists of at least 25% of at least one phase of the group consisting of the sigma, mu, xi and chi phases, pressing the powder mixture to form a body and sintering said body at a temperature below the melting point of the pulverulent components of the mixture.
In spite of the fact that great atomic movements must take place during the diffusion and in spite of the fact that no molten phase is formed, it is possible according to the present invention, using comparatively very short sintering times, to produce sintered bodies having agood chemical homogeneity and a very high density, i.e., only a very small porosity.
Some of these phases have been discovered only recently and the nomenclature has not been definitely established but it is known that the mu, xi and chi phases are related to the sigma phase and have similar crystal structures. Reference is in this respect made to Hume- Rothery: The Structure of Metals and Alloys.
The sigma phase has hitherto won a reputation only as an undesirable and injurious structural component of so-called stainless and, related grades of steel. The sigma phase is'an intermetallic compound which can be formed by interalloying two or more of the metals Fe, Cr, Ni, Co, V,'Mn, Mo, W and others. Many of these intermetallic compounds have only quite lately been discovered. Tables 1-3 exemplify some of these compounds. Among other things they are characterized by a crystal structure wherein the atoms are arranged in very dense lattices.
Below will be given, firstly, the recently published compositional limits for the existence of the pure sigma and related phases for a number of binary (Table 1) and ternary (Table 2) alloys, and secondly (Table 3) a number of alloys which according to our own practical tests have proved to be usefulin accordance with the invention.
In some important cases (e.g. acid resisting sigma phase, to add elements which would not be necessary in view of the corrosion resistance properties of the finished steel but'whieh in-that respect are harmless. We have found that the alloy powder maycontain beelements: Ni, Mo, W, Cu, Mn, Ti,
V, Nb, Ta, Si, Zr, Al, P, N and c. p
The alloys of the above table are of sigma type. Alloys conta ning phases of a closely related type and alloys containing mixtures of such phases and sigma phase are formed by the additional alloying of Nb and/or Ta.
Table 2 Range of Type of System stability brittle phase Cr:5559% Cr-Co-Ni sigma.
Cr-Co--F sigma.
C'r-Cosigma.
CrNi-Mo sigma.
Fe-Co-Mo mu.
FeNi-Mo mu.
NiOoMo {mm Table 3 Per- Per- Per- Per- Per- Per- Per- Percent cent cent cent cent cent cent cent Cr N1 M 011 Mn Si Ti Nb All these alloys contain sigma phase The alloys (4),
(5) and (7) probably also contain xi phase. The carbon content is low. In all cases the remainder consists of iron with the usual impurities.
It is not yet quite clear how the sigma and related phases effect their favourable influence, but probably the following factors are involved: H
(1) The breaking of passive films on the surface of the particles due to the increase of volume when the sigma and related phases transform to alpha phase.
(2) The high reactivity of the particles during and after the phase transformation (the Hedvall effect).
. (3) The increased rate of diffusion due to the increase of the interatomic distance which results from the lattice transformation.
.(4) The gradual increasein volume of the soft powder particles as 'the diffusion of chromium proceeds into them, as described below. x I 1 As will be shown below-and this isquite unexpectedthe very porous compacts made of brittle powder of sigma and related phase alloys when heated fora short mixture of e.g. 1 part sigma and related phase alloy and 1 part iron after a short sintering period consists of a skeleton of alpha phase (formerly sigma and related phases) in which the particles of iron (gamma phase) are embedded. As would be expected such a sinter body has a somewhat higher porosity. The contact between the iron and the alloy-skeleton is, however, very effective. The passive film is broken and thus the difiusion conditions are very good. As diffusion proceeds the iron particles become enriched with chromium and gradually transform from gamma to alpha phase. This transformationis accompanied by a volume increase which, taking place in the cavities of a stiff skeleton, leads to a gradual compression and diminution of the still present pores.
The essential features of the invention having 'now been described-a number of details will be given, the incorporationof which has proved to improve the sintering results. i 7
As indicated above the powder admixed with the alloy '(sigma and related phase containing) powder should be soft. The reason is that a sufiiciently high so-called green density and green strength (density and strength of pressed, not sintered, compacts.) thus obtained. A high green density results in less shrinkage after sintering which also is an advantage.
The powder mixture which is to be pressed and sintered, may also contain other component powders, e.g. a powder which does not contain sigma or related phase and which consists of one or more alloying elements. In order to facilitate diffusion, however, the powder mixture should contain only a few component powders and preferably only two. Therefore, the soft powder as well as the alloy powder should be uniform, and the alloy powder should contain all the alloying elements and possibly also part of the soft powder metal. 'The green density is favourably influenced by a suitable distribution of the grain size of the powders. From the point of view of diffusion it is desirable that the powders have substantially the same screen analysis. All powders should be fine-grained, the diffusion then requiring less time. It has been found suitable to use a particle size of 0.074 mm. (200 mesh) and preferably 0.044 mm. (325 mesh).
The soft powder should be as ductile as possible. The chemical composition should be proportioned so that the mass ratio of soft powder to alloy powder is between 2 to l and 1 to 2. From the point of view of diffusion it is desirable that said ratio be about 1 t0 1, so that particles of both powders will with the greatest probability find themselves next to each other in the final mixture, whereby the diffusion distance will be the shortest possible. A high proportion'of the hard alloy powder in the powder mixture is harmful as it accelerates the wearing of the pressing tools. A high proportion of the soft powder component on the other hand results in an increased porosity of the body after sintering.
The soft powder most frequently used according to this invention is pure iron, e.g. electrolytic iron. Other examples are low alloyed iron, pure nickel, pure cobalt or some binary or ternary alloys of said metals. x The alloy powder should contain all the sluggish diffusing elements to be contained in .the finished 'sintered steel. It should 'be uniform, i.e. eachparticle of the powder should have the same chemical composition. As
the soft powder preferably consists of a single metal the alloy powder should thus contain all the other elements. -Inprinciple, the use of alloy powders is notnew in powder metallurgy. Thus it is known to use socalled master alloys, especially when introducing into a sinteredv compact volatile elements such .as sulphur, or elements which easily form gaseous compounds, such as carbon. Ferrochromium, ferro-molybdenur'n Land other ferroalloys which are added to powder mixtures when producing low alloyed steel are also examples of such master alloys. In order to facilitate diffusion according to the invention the idea of master alloying should be carried out as far as possible keeping in mind thatthe master alloy must also have a defined metallographic structure containing at least 25. percent of sigma and/or related phase.
The alloy powder can be selected with such acomposition that the sigma or related phase is transformed to alpha phase merely by the temperature being raised above a certain limit or threshold value which is found at different levels for the various alloys. Other alloys which are suitable for performing the method according to the invention contain a sigma or related phase which is stable to very high temperatures, in some cases up to the melting point, and the phase transformation in these cases is brought about by the diffusion of the soft metal into the particles of the alloy, whereby the critical chemical composition is successively attained and the phase transformation takes place. In such a case a very high density may be obtained, but longer time is required for complete diffusion.
Of course, the diffusion takes place at ahigher rate at the beginning and gradually slowsdown as the concentration gradient gets smaller. A complete equalisation of analysis will therefore necessitate a very long period of time. This disadvantage can be neutralized according to the invention in a simple way by employing a minor excess of one or more alloying elements, the content of which must not, in any part of the final sintered body, be belowv a certain limiting value, which is decisive for the corrosion resistance. When producing a pressed and sintered body of e.g. 18/8 composition the proportion of alloy powder to soft metal-powder (iron powder) is sochosen that .it approximately corresponds to the composition 20% Cr and 8% Ni. Even if the diffusion of chromiumis not complete, those parts of the structure which have not entirely diffused will in this .case have such ahigh content of chromium that they will possess sufficient resistance against corrosion.
The influence of the structure of .the alloy powder upon the result of the sintering and diffusion will be evident from the experimental results below (see also the ternary phase diagram in Figure 1). In all-tests powders were used having a particle size of .0.044 mm. (325 mesh). Briquets were pressed (compacting pressure 7.5 metric tons/cm?) from 'the'various powder mixtures (1 part of soft powder+1 part of alloy powder). The sintering was performed in pure hydrogen for two hours at 1310 C.
(1) Merely soft powder (electrolytic iron). gravity after sintering 6.96. Porosity 11.8%.
(2) Soft powder according to Example l+alloy ,powder of composition 30% Cr, 30% Ni and the rest Fe (point 2 in the diagram). The structure of the alloy powder is gamma. Specific gravity after sintering 6.95. Porosity 13.1%. Corrosion resistance in boiling HNO (48 hrs.) in comparison with cast alloy of the same composition: Loss 'in weight in g./m. h. Sintered metal 0.5; casting 0.00.
(3) Soft powder according to Example l+alloy powder of composition 45% Cr, 30% Ni and the rest Fe (point 3 in the diagram). The structure of the alloy powder is alpha-i-gamma. Specific gravity after sintering 6.10. Porosity 22.6%. Corrosion resistance in boiling 65% HNO (48 hrs.) in comparison with casting alloy of the same composition: Loss in weight in g./m. h.fiSintered metal 66; casting 0.1.
(4) Soft powder according to Example l+alloy powder (in accordance with the invention) of composition 50% Cr, 3% Ni and the rest Fe (point 5 in the diagram).
The structure of the alloy powder is sigma and/or related phase. Specific gravity after sintering 7.38. Porosity 3.7%. Corrosion resistance in boiling 65% HNO (48 hrs.) in comparison with casting alloy of the same composition: Loss in weight in g./rn. h.Sintered metal 0.9; casting 0.6.
(5 Soft powder according to Example l+alloy powder (in accordance with the invention) of composition 45% Cr, 20% Ni, 5% Mo and the rest Fe (point 4 in the diagram). The structure of the alloy powder is sigma and/or related phase-l-gamma. Specific gravity after sintering 7.51. Porosity 4.5%. Corrosion resistance in boiling 65% HNO (48 hrs.) in comparison with casting alloy of the same composition: Loss in weight in g./m. h.Sintered metal 1.1; casting 1.1.
(6) Soft powder according to Example 1+ferrochromium powder-i-carbonyl nickel powder-i-ferromolybdenum powder. The composition of the sintered body is the same as that of the body described in Example 5. Specific gravity after sintering 6.88. Porosity 11.7%. Corrosion resistance in boiling 65% HNO (48 hrs.) in comparison with a casting alloy having the same compositionrLoss in weight in g./m. h.Sintered metal 5.4; casting 1.1.
These experimental results clearly show that only the sigma and/or related phase containing powder mixtures yield sinter bodies of the density and corrosion resistance required.
In another experiment bodies consisting merely of the pure alloy powders used in the above examples were pressed and sintered. The pressing and sintering conditions were the same as in the above examples. The specific gravity of the bodies was determined before and after the sintering.
(7) Alloy powder having the composition described in Example 2, i.e. containing 30% Cr, 30% Ni, the remainder being iron. The structure is gamma. Specific gravity: before sintering 5.9; after sintering 6.6.
(8) Alloy powder having the composition described in Example 3, i.e. containing 45% Cr, 30% Ni, the remainder being iron. The structure 'is alpha+gamma. Specific gravity: before sintering 5.8; after sintering 6.5.
(9) Alloy powder having the composition described in Example 4, i.e. containing 50% Cr, 3% Ni, the remainder being iron. The structure is sigma or related phase. Specific gravity: before sintering 5.3; after sintering 7.2.
(10) Alloy powder having the composition described in Example 5, i.e. containing 45% Cr, 20% Ni, 5% M0, the remainder being iron; The structure is sigma or related phase+gamma. Specific gravity: before sintering 5.3; after sintering 7.6.
Obviously, the signma or related phase containing powders have sintered to very dense bodies, in spite of the fact that it has not been possible to compress said powders, owing to their hardness, to a green density higher than 5.3. The softer powders, which do not contain sigma or related phase, may be pressed to a higher green density of 5.85.9, but this is increased very insignificantly during sintering.
In Example 10 the specific gravity of the body being sintered was also determined as a function of time. The following results were obtained.
The table shows that sintering occurs very rapidly. Thus, a sintering time of 15 minutes gives a specific gravity of 7.38. As a contrast Example 8 may be mentioned, in
which a powder is sintered'having approximately the same content of alloying elements but containing no sigma or related phase After two hours sintering the under the same conditions as described in the above examples. Curves 1 and 2 show the pore volume (along 7 the ordinate) as function of the proportion (along the abscissa) I of alloy powder in the powder mixture, curve 1 referring to the bodies before sintering (green), and
of porosity during sintering as a function of the proportion of alloy powder in the powder mixture Curve .3 shows that the alloy powder has its maximum porositydecreasing ability when the ratio base powder to alloying powder is about 1 to l.
Most of the stainless sinter powders which at present exist on the market are produced by means of atomisation and will thus consist of particles all of which have the same composition as the finished stainless sinter body. Below (Table 4) a few comparative data are presented of sintered briquets produced from such a powder (A), from a powder mixture as described in Example 5 above (B) (in accordancewith the invention), and finally, of rolled stainless steel (C) produced by conventional melting.
Table 4 The table shows thesintered steel produced in accordance with the invention to be of equal merit, from the standpoint of corrosion resistance, with rolled stainless steel produced in the conventional way. This is, however, not the case with material produced; from atomized powder, the corrosion resistance of which is very poor. Both types of sintered steel have'mechanical properties which are somewhat inferior to those of rolled material but approximately equal to those of stainless castings.
What I claim is:
1. A method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of alloys which comprises forming a mixture the major part of which consists of two powders one of which is a ductile metal powder and consists essentially of at least one of the metals of the group consisting of iron, cobalt and nickel and the other of which is an alloy curve 2 after sintering. Curve 3 illustrates the decrease powder the structureof which consists of at least 25% 0f at least .one phase .of th'e group consisting-of the sigma, mu, xi and chi phases'fsaid powdehmixture containing at least 10% of chromium,'pressing said mixture to form a coherent, body'fand heating said. body at a temperature b'elow'themelting points of said two powders but at a temperature and for a time sufficient to causea .difiusion reaction between said powders to form a substantially chemically homogeneous. alloy which is substantially free of said phase and to cause sintering together of said powders, the ratio of said. ductile metal powder tos'aid alloy powderinsaid mixture being Wtihin the range from 2 to 1 to l to 2.
2. A method as claimed in claim 1, in which all the particles of the ductile powder have the same composition.
3. A method as claimedin claim 1 in-which all the particles of the alloy powder have the same composition.
4. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which the alloy powder contains the whole amount of .the alloying elements to be contained in the finished body.
5. A method as claimed in, claim 1, in which the ductile powder consists of one metal. V
6. A method as claimed in claim 5, in which the ductile powder consists of substantially pure iron.
7. A method as claimed in claim .5, in which ,th ductile powder consists of substantiallypurenickel.
8. Aimethod as claimed in claim 1, in which the ductile powder and the alloy powder have such compositions that the finished sintered body ,has the composition of a stainless chromium steel. a V
9. A. method as claimed in claim 7, in which thealloying powder has such a composition that the finished sintered body contains about 13% chromium and about nickel, the remainder being iron.
10. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which th alloy powder contains about 45% chromium, 20% nickel and 5% molybdenum, the remainder being iron.
11. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which the ductile powder and the alloy powder each has a grain size of lessthan 0.074 millimeter. i
12. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which the alloy powder consists of substantially pure sigma phase. 13. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which the ductile powder and the alloy powder each has a grain size of less than 0.044 millimeter.
.14. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which the ratio of ductile powder to alloy powder is between 2 to land1to2.
15. A method as claimed in claim l'in which the alloy powder contains less than 0.10% carbon.
16. A method as claimed in claim 1 in which. the ratio of ductile powderto alloy powder is about 1 to L References Cited in the file of this patent V UNITED STATES PATENTS Pavitt May 5, 1953

Claims (1)

1. A METHOD FOR THE POWDER METALLURGICAL MANUFACTURE OF ALLOYS WHICH COMPRISES FORMING A MIXTURE THE MAJOR PART OF WHICH CONSISTS OF TWO POWDERS ONE OF WHICH IS A DUCTILE METAL POWDER AND CONSISTS ESSENTIALLY OF AT LEAST ONE OF THE METLAS OF THE GROUP CONSISTING OF IRON, COBALT AND NICKEL AND THE OTHER OF WHICH IS AN ALLOY POWDER THE STRUCTURE OF WHICH CONSISTS OF AT LEAST 25% OF AT LEAST ONE PHASE OF THE GROUP CONSISTING OF THE SIGMA, MU, XI AND CHI PHASES, SAID POWDER MIXTURE CONTAINING AT LEAST 10% OF CHROMIUM, PRESSING SAID MIXTURE TO FORM A COHERENT BODY AND HEATING SAID BODY AT A TEMPERATURE BELOW THE MELTING POINTS OF SAID TWO POWDERS BUT AT A TEMPERATURE AND FOR A TIME SUFFICIENT TO CAUSE A DIFFUSION REACTION BETWEEN SAID POWDERS TO FORM A SUBSTANTIALLY CHEMICALLY HOMOGENEOUS ALLOY WHICH IS SUBSTANTIALLY FREE OF SAID PHASE AND TO CAUSE SINTERING TOGETHER OF SAID POWDERS, THE RATIO OF SAID DUCTILE METAL POWDER TO SAID ALLOY POWDER IN SAID MIXTURE BEING WITHIN THE RANGE FROM 2 TO 1 TO 2.
US623470A 1955-11-21 1956-11-20 Method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of chromium alloys Expired - Lifetime US2920958A (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
SE2920958X 1955-11-21

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2920958A true US2920958A (en) 1960-01-12

Family

ID=20427822

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US623470A Expired - Lifetime US2920958A (en) 1955-11-21 1956-11-20 Method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of chromium alloys

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2920958A (en)

Cited By (9)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3126279A (en) * 1961-05-19 1964-03-24 Powder-metallurgical production of
US3142893A (en) * 1961-06-20 1964-08-04 Int Nickel Co Heterogeneous sintered alloys
US3196007A (en) * 1962-06-12 1965-07-20 Brush Beryllium Co Beryllium copper composition and method of producing green compacts and sintered articles therefrom
US3254995A (en) * 1962-04-13 1966-06-07 Powder Alloys Corp Heavy metal alloys
US3620690A (en) * 1968-07-10 1971-11-16 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Sintered austenitic-ferritic chromium-nickel steel alloy
US3940269A (en) * 1968-07-10 1976-02-24 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Sintered austenitic-ferritic chromium-nickel steel alloy
US4117058A (en) * 1976-12-03 1978-09-26 General Motors Corporation Method of making boron containing strontium ferrite
DE3421858A1 (en) * 1983-06-15 1985-01-03 Nippon Dia Clevite Co., Ltd., Narashino, Chiba Process for manufacturing a porous body from stainless steel
US4552719A (en) * 1980-12-03 1985-11-12 N.D.C. Co., Ltd. Method of sintering stainless steel powder

Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1359353A (en) * 1918-10-16 1920-11-16 Charles L Gebauer Mithod of producing formed metallic articles
US1661245A (en) * 1923-05-22 1928-03-06 Gen Motors Res Corp Bearing composition
US1793757A (en) * 1927-02-05 1931-02-24 William H Smith Process of uniting iron with other metals and elements
US1922038A (en) * 1931-10-06 1933-08-15 Hardy Metallurg Company Stainless metal
US2284638A (en) * 1938-08-20 1942-06-02 Frances H Clark Metallurgy of ferrous metals
US2426659A (en) * 1941-03-17 1947-09-02 Wulff John Producing electrical contact material
US2637671A (en) * 1948-03-13 1953-05-05 Simonds Saw & Steel Co Powder metallurgy method of making steel cutting tools

Patent Citations (7)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US1359353A (en) * 1918-10-16 1920-11-16 Charles L Gebauer Mithod of producing formed metallic articles
US1661245A (en) * 1923-05-22 1928-03-06 Gen Motors Res Corp Bearing composition
US1793757A (en) * 1927-02-05 1931-02-24 William H Smith Process of uniting iron with other metals and elements
US1922038A (en) * 1931-10-06 1933-08-15 Hardy Metallurg Company Stainless metal
US2284638A (en) * 1938-08-20 1942-06-02 Frances H Clark Metallurgy of ferrous metals
US2426659A (en) * 1941-03-17 1947-09-02 Wulff John Producing electrical contact material
US2637671A (en) * 1948-03-13 1953-05-05 Simonds Saw & Steel Co Powder metallurgy method of making steel cutting tools

Cited By (10)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3126279A (en) * 1961-05-19 1964-03-24 Powder-metallurgical production of
DE1258109B (en) * 1961-05-19 1968-01-04 Wargoens Aktiebolag Process for the powder-metallurgical production of bodies intended for further processing
US3142893A (en) * 1961-06-20 1964-08-04 Int Nickel Co Heterogeneous sintered alloys
US3254995A (en) * 1962-04-13 1966-06-07 Powder Alloys Corp Heavy metal alloys
US3196007A (en) * 1962-06-12 1965-07-20 Brush Beryllium Co Beryllium copper composition and method of producing green compacts and sintered articles therefrom
US3620690A (en) * 1968-07-10 1971-11-16 Minnesota Mining & Mfg Sintered austenitic-ferritic chromium-nickel steel alloy
US3940269A (en) * 1968-07-10 1976-02-24 Minnesota Mining And Manufacturing Company Sintered austenitic-ferritic chromium-nickel steel alloy
US4117058A (en) * 1976-12-03 1978-09-26 General Motors Corporation Method of making boron containing strontium ferrite
US4552719A (en) * 1980-12-03 1985-11-12 N.D.C. Co., Ltd. Method of sintering stainless steel powder
DE3421858A1 (en) * 1983-06-15 1985-01-03 Nippon Dia Clevite Co., Ltd., Narashino, Chiba Process for manufacturing a porous body from stainless steel

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US5098469A (en) Powder metal process for producing multiphase NI-AL-TI intermetallic alloys
US3999952A (en) Sintered hard alloy of multiple boride containing iron
US3620690A (en) Sintered austenitic-ferritic chromium-nickel steel alloy
US3551991A (en) Infiltrated cemented carbides
US2920958A (en) Method for the powder metallurgical manufacture of chromium alloys
US3183127A (en) Heat treatable tool steel of high carbide content
US2988806A (en) Sintered magnetic alloy and methods of production
JPS593534B2 (en) Production method of iron-copper-based high-density sintered alloy
US4801330A (en) High strength, high hardness tungsten heavy alloys with molybdenum additions and method
US4131450A (en) Process for manufacturing cobalt-base reduced powder
GB1449978A (en) Refractory metal-containing bodies
US3161949A (en) Refractory metal base alloys and method of making same
US3708282A (en) Production of sintered metal products
JPH0356281B2 (en)
US3357826A (en) Powder metallurgical production of chromium-containing alloys
US3196007A (en) Beryllium copper composition and method of producing green compacts and sintered articles therefrom
US3141235A (en) Powdered tantalum articles
US3689257A (en) Method of producing sintered ferrous materials
US3510276A (en) Sintered titanium carbide bodies
US3890105A (en) Metallic sintering powder or alloy
JPS61231102A (en) Powder based on iron containing ni and mo for producing highstrength sintered body
US3497347A (en) Phosphorus containing iron powder
US3451809A (en) Method of sintering maraging steel with boron additions
US3314787A (en) Method for producing an mg addition agent
US3708283A (en) Process for preparing cemented ferrochrome