Rhenium alloying of tungsten heavy alloys
Alloying experiments were performed using rhenium additions to a classic 90 mass % tungsten heavy alloy. The mixed-powder system was liquid phase sintered to full density at 1500 C in 60 min The rhenium-modified alloys exhibited a smaller grain size, higher hardness, higher strength, and lower ductility than the unalloyed system. For an alloy with a composition of 84W-6Re-8Ni-2Fe, the sintered density was 17, 4 Mg/m{sup 3} with a yield strength of 815 MPa, tensile strength of 1180 MPa, and elongation to failure of 13%. This property combination results from the aggregate effects of grain size reduction and solid solution hardening due to rhenium. In the unalloyed system these properties require post-sintering swaging and aging; thus, alloying with rhenium is most attractive for applications where net shaping is desired, such as by powder injection molding.
- Research Organization:
- Rensselaer Polytechnic Inst., Troy, NY (USA). Dept. of Materials Engineering
- OSTI ID:
- 5422762
- Report Number(s):
- AD-A-211099/7/XAB
- Resource Relation:
- Other Information: Pub. in Powder Metallurgy International, Vol. 20, No. 3, 9-13(1989)
- Country of Publication:
- United States
- Language:
- English
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Related Subjects
RHENIUM ALLOYS
POWDER METALLURGY
TUNGSTEN ALLOYS
DENSITY
DUCTILITY
ELONGATION
GRAIN SIZE
HARDENING
HARDNESS
MIXING
PHYSICAL PROPERTIES
POWDERS
REDUCTION
SHAPE
SINTERING
SOLID SOLUTIONS
ALLOYS
CHEMICAL REACTIONS
CRYSTAL STRUCTURE
DISPERSIONS
FABRICATION
MECHANICAL PROPERTIES
METALLURGY
MICROSTRUCTURE
MIXTURES
SIZE
SOLUTIONS
TENSILE PROPERTIES
360102* - Metals & Alloys- Structure & Phase Studies