RI 7485 Tungsten And Dispersion-Strengthened Tungsten Made By Freeze Drying

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
M. J. Ferrante
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
36
File Size:
13548 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1971

Abstract

The Bureau of Mines investigated the applicability of the freeze-drying technique for preparing dispersion-strengthened tungsten powders suitable for conversion by powder metallurgy into materials which might have improved high-temperature strength. Extruded rods from compacts of tungsten-5 vol pct thoria had at 1,650° C a tensile strength of 30,300 psi and a 10-hour stress-rupture strength of 12,700 psi, These are slightly below those measured for swaged rods of commercial tungsten-3.7 vol pct thoria. Only those tungsten-thoria dispersions containing a stoichiometric deficiency of oxygen yielded a significant strengthening effect. A low-melting eutectic formed in extruded tungsten dispersions containing either zirconia or yttria, which caused a lowering of the tensile strengths. These tensile strengths were only slightly higher than strengths of elemental tungsten made from commercial powder having a particle size of 2.4 microns (Fisher subsieve). Sheet made from this commercial tungsten had a slightly higher tensile strength than tungsten made by freeze drying, but the freeze-dried tungsten sheet had a lower recrystallization temperature, a lower ductile-to-brittle transition temperature, and a higher purity.
Citation

APA: M. J. Ferrante  (1971)  RI 7485 Tungsten And Dispersion-Strengthened Tungsten Made By Freeze Drying

MLA: M. J. Ferrante RI 7485 Tungsten And Dispersion-Strengthened Tungsten Made By Freeze Drying. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1971.

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