Casting And Heat Treatment Of Some Aluminum-Copper-Magnesium Alloys

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Samuel Daniels
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
22
File Size:
705 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 7, 1924

Abstract

Aluminum-base alloys containing small amounts of copper and magnesium possess but ordinary physical properties as sand cast, but may be treated to give a remarkable range of tensile values and of Brinell hardness. The high-copper (4.5 per cent.) duralumins must be given a protracted treatment which in nature resembles the malleableizing of white cast iron; the low-copper (2.25 per cent.) duralumins develop an excellent combination of strength and ductility with a treatment which requires a maximum of 5 hr. to be completed. THE wrought alloys of aluminum with small amounts of copper and of magnesium have, with the development of the automotive and aircraft industries, sprung into prominence through the medium of duralumin; but the cast alloys remained in the background because their possibilities in the heat-treated condition were either not recognized or not fully investigated. In 1919, the Bureau of Standards published a preliminary survey1 of this field, which pointed out that, in general, the ultimate strength and the percentage of elongation of the alloys of aluminum with and without magnesium could be improved by so simple a treatment as heating to 932° F. (500° C.) for 2 hr., cooling in, air, and aging at room temperature for several days. British investigators, too, working with chill-cast material, found that " considerable improvement in the mechanical properties of copper-aluminum alloys' may be obtained from suitable heat treatment applied to castings."2 Jeffries and Gibson3 made the first contribution to the literature dealing exclusively with the heat treatment of sand-cast aluminum-base alloys, describing the effect of small additions or of combinations of copper, magnesium, and iron on the response to a short heat treatment comprising heating at 932° F. in a
Citation

APA: Samuel Daniels  (1924)  Casting And Heat Treatment Of Some Aluminum-Copper-Magnesium Alloys

MLA: Samuel Daniels Casting And Heat Treatment Of Some Aluminum-Copper-Magnesium Alloys. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1924.

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