Institute of Metals Division - The Alloy Systems Uranium-Tungsten, Uranium-Tantalum and Tungsten-Tantalum

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
C. H. Schramm P. Gordon A. R. Kaufman
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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10
File Size:
870 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1951

Abstract

AS a part of the general program on alloys of uranium carried out at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology under contract W-7405-eng-175 for the Manhattan Project during the recent war, it was considered desirable to investigate the boundary binary phase diagrams of the ternary alloy system uranium-tungsten-tantalum. Previous work on these alloys was practically nonexistent. A brief statement to the effect that tantalum and tungsten form a continuous series of solid solutions was found in a general paper on tantalum by W. V. Bolton1 but no information was available on the uranium-tungsten and uranium-tantalum systems. The research to be described in this paper has served to delineate the main features of the uranium-tungsten, uranium-tantalum phase diagrams and to check Bolton's work on the tungsten-tantalum diagram. Experimental Details Metals: The tungsten and tantalum used for preparing the alloys were 99.96 and 99.65 pct pure, respectively. The chief impurities in the metals were about 0.02 pct molybdenum in the tungsten, and 0.2 pct columbium, 0.05 pct tungsten, 0.02 pct barium and 0.01 pct silicon in the tantalum. The uranium used was 99.9 pct pure, with the main contaminants being iron and carbon. (An appreciable amount of magnesium was present in the uranium as received, but this distilled off during melting and so is not reported as an impurity.) The composition of specimens indicated in the subsequent figures and tables of this paper are the results of chemical analyses on the cast alloys except for the tantalum-tungsten alloys. For the latter, chemical analysis was not very reliable as a result of the difficulty of separating tungsten and tantalum chemically. Consequently, the nominal
Citation

APA: C. H. Schramm P. Gordon A. R. Kaufman  (1951)  Institute of Metals Division - The Alloy Systems Uranium-Tungsten, Uranium-Tantalum and Tungsten-Tantalum

MLA: C. H. Schramm P. Gordon A. R. Kaufman Institute of Metals Division - The Alloy Systems Uranium-Tungsten, Uranium-Tantalum and Tungsten-Tantalum. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1951.

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