Technical Notes - Microstructural Differences in Tempered Titanium Alloys

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
L. D. Jaffe
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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2
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257 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1957

Abstract

IT is now well established that quenched and tempered titanium alloys have much better ductility when the quenching is from a two phase a-B structure, rather than from an all B structure. The corresponding microstructural differences, however, have not been shown in previous publications. Accordingly, specimens were cut from a % in. rod of commercial RC-130A, containing 7.9 pct Mn and 0.12 pct C, which had been previously hot rolled, heated 1 hr at 1100°F, and air cooled. (The same heat has been studied by others." 7 Samples about 1/4 in. cube were heated in helium 1/2 hr at 1450' or 1700°F, quenched in brine, tempered in helium 1 hr at various temperatures up to 1250°F, and quenched in brine. They were then sectioned and metallo-graphically examined, using an etchant of HF-HNO, in glycerine. As quenched from 1700°F, the microstructure observed was clear /3. (Probably also present was U, as the hardness was 400 Vhn, but w is not yet reliably revealed by any metallographic technique.) When the /3 quenched alloy was tempered at a high temperature, a precipitated as a grain boundary film
Citation

APA: L. D. Jaffe  (1957)  Technical Notes - Microstructural Differences in Tempered Titanium Alloys

MLA: L. D. Jaffe Technical Notes - Microstructural Differences in Tempered Titanium Alloys. The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1957.

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