Not applicable.
This disclosure relates to powder metallurgy. In particular, this disclosure relates to powder metal formulations for powder metallurgy.
Powder metallurgy is an alternative to more traditional metal forming techniques such as casting. Using powder metallurgy, parts with complex geometries may be fabricated that have dimensions very close to those dimensions desired in the final part. This dimensional accuracy can save significant expense in machining or reworking, particularly for parts having large production volumes.
Parts made by powder metallurgy are typically formed in the following way. First, a formulation including one or more powder metals and a lubricant material is compacted in a tool and die set under pressure to form a PM compact. This PM compact is then heated to remove the lubricant material and to sinter the individual particles of the powder metal together by diffusion-based mass transport. Sintering is typically performed by heating the powder metal material to a temperature that is either slightly below or above its solidus temperature. When held below the solidus sintering occurs in the absence of a liquid phase. This is commonly referred to as solid state sintering. When held above the solidus, a controlled fraction of liquid phase is formed. Sintering in this manner is known as liquid phase sintering. Regardless of the sintering temperature employed, the sintered part is very similar in shape to the original compact.
During the sintering process, it is common for the parts to shrink dimensionally. As diffusion occurs, adjacent particles will neck into one another to form permanent bonds with one another and to begin to fill any voids between the particles. This densification closes and/or decreases the size of the pores and decreases the overall size of the sintered part in comparison to the compact. Even at long sintering times, however, some voids will remain in the sintered part. Unfortunately, for sintered parts that are less than fully dense, the mechanical strength of those sintered parts are also usually somewhat less than that of a wrought part.
Moreover, in many sintered parts, the shrinkage may be, for any of a number of reasons, different in various directions. This kind of anisotropic shrinkage can alter the dimensional accuracy of the as-sintered final part and, in some cases, may require that parts be reworked after sintering.
Hence, a need exists for improved powder metals. In particular, there has been a continued need for powder metals that, when sintered, have mechanical strength approaching that of their wrought counterparts and that do not exhibit anisotropic shrinkage.
An improved aluminum powder metal, and a related method of making the powder metal, is disclosed which has reduced distortion during sintering of a part made by the powder metal. The aluminum powder metal reduces the amount of distortion at least in part, by doping the aluminum powder metal with zirconium in a relatively homogenous fashion throughout the powder metal. Further, a formulation of this powder metal composition is disclosed including an amount of tin which provides an improved Young's modulus that, surprisingly and unexpectedly, approaches the Young's modulus of a fully dense material made by casting or the like.
A method of making a powder metal for production of a powder metal part is disclosed. The method includes forming an aluminum-zirconium melt in which a zirconium content of the aluminum-zirconium melt is less than 2.0 percent by weight of the melt. The aluminum-zirconium melt is powderized to form a zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal.
In one form of the method, the step of powderizing may include air atomizing the aluminum-zirconium melt. In other forms of the method, powderizing the aluminum-zirconium melt to form a zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal may include atomizing with gases other than air (such as, for example, nitrogen, argon, or helium), comminution, grinding, chemical reaction, and/or electrolytic deposition.
A powder metal part may be formed from the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal. A quantity of zirconium in the powder metal part may be substantially equal to a quantity of zirconium found in the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal used to form the powder metal part, meaning that little or no zirconium is added by an elemental powder or as part of a master alloy. The zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal may inhibit distortion of the powder metal part during a sintering process used to form the powder metal part. The powder metal part may include zirconium in an amount of less than 2.0 weight percent.
The zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal may be mixed with other powder metals to provide at least one other alloying element. By mixing the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal with another powder metal, a mixed powder metal is formed which then can be used to form the powder metal part.
In one form, the other powder metal may include tin as an alloying element. This tin may be added as an elemental powder to the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal or be prealloyed as part of a master alloy. The tin may be approximately 0.2 percent by weight of the mixed powder metal. A powder metal part made from the mixed powder metal with approximately 0.2 weight percent tin is shown to have a Young's modulus above 70 GPa and approaching 80 GPa. A Young's modulus of this value is comparable to that of a full dense part made by traditional metal forming processes such as casting.
A powder metal made by the above-stated methods is also disclosed. The powder metal is a zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal in which the zirconium is homogenously dispersed throughout the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal and, further, in which the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal contains less than 2.0 weight percent zirconium.
In some forms of the powder metal, the powder metal may contain approximately 0.2 weight percent tin as an elemental powder or prealloyed.
Additionally, the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal may be formed by air atomization or by the other forms of powderization described herein.
In some forms, the powder metal may include a percentage of fines effective to further enhance the dimensional stability of a part made from the powder metal. In one embodiment, the weight percentage of fines may exceed 10 weight percent of the powder metal.
These and still other advantages of the invention will be apparent from the detailed description and drawings. What follows is merely a description of some preferred embodiments of the present invention. To assess the full scope of the invention, the claims should be looked to as these preferred embodiments are not intended to be the only embodiments within the scope of the claims.
A number of powder metal samples were produced having various chemistries for comparison purposes. As a baseline system for comparison, a blend designated A36 was used. The formulation for the A36 blend is found in Table I below.
The Licowax C is a lubricant material and boils off during heating. Thus, the total mass of powder for a 1 kg lot will actually exceed 1 kg because of the additional mass of the Licowax C constituent.
A modified form of the A36 powder formulation was also produced which will be referred to in this application as E36-Zr. The E36-Zr powder formulation is identical to the A36 blend, except that the aluminum powder is replaced with an air atomized zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal having 0.2% by weight zirconium. The formulation for the E36-Zr blend is found in Table II below.
Notably, the E36-Zr powder blend includes a zirconium-doped aluminum powder with 0.2 wt % zirconium. Conventionally, when alloying elements, such as zirconium are added to a powder blend, these alloying elements are added as part of either an elemental powder (i.e., a pure powder containing only the alloying element) or as a master alloy containing a large amount of both the base material, which in this case is aluminum, and the alloying element. When a master alloy is used, then to obtain the desired amount of the alloying element in the final part, the master alloy will then be “cut” with an elemental powder of the base material. This cutting technique is used, for example, to obtain the desired amount of copper in each of the A36 powder using the Al—Cu (50-50) master alloy and elemental aluminum powder.
In contrast, the zirconium-doped aluminum powder metal is obtained by air or gas atomizing an aluminum zirconium melt containing the desired final composition of zirconium. Air atomizing the powder becomes problematic at higher zirconium concentrations and so it may not be possible to atomize zirconium-doped powders having high weight percentages of zirconium (believed at this time to exceed 2 weight percent zirconium, but this value may be as high as 5 weight percent zirconium).
The addition of zirconium results in the formation of intermetallics, such as Al3Zr, that strengthen the alloy and that remain stable over a range of temperatures. If the zirconium was added as an elemental powder or as part of a master alloy, then the intermetallic phase would be formed preferentially along the grain boundaries and would be coarse in size since relatively slow diffusion kinetics prevent zirconium from being uniformly distributed within the sintered microstructure. Under those conditions, the intermetallic phase imparts only limited improvement in the properties of the final part.
By doping the zirconium in the aluminum powder, rather than adding the zirconium in the form of an elemental powder or as part of a master alloy, the zirconium is more evenly and homogeneously dispersed throughout the entire powder metal as illustrated by a comparison of
The A36 and E36-Zr powders were made into test bars. Each of the powders were compacted at various compaction pressures (either 200 MPa or 400 MPa) into test bar samples, sintered, and then given a T6 temper heat-treatment. After heat treatment, the various mechanical properties were tested and compared to one another. Table III, below, summarizes the results of the various tests.
As can be seen above in Table III, the 0.2 weight percent zirconium doping improved the average yield strength, the average ultimate tensile strength, the average elongation, and the average Young's modulus of the test samples. Notably, the observed elongation in the zirconium-doped aluminum samples was much higher and was similar to the control ductility observed in typical T1 temper heat treated samples. Further, the yield strength and the ultimate tensile strength also improved noticeably with the additional zirconium doping.
The changes in various physical characteristics were also measured between the as-compacted and the as-heat treated samples. Table IV below lists the average changes in mass, the average sintered density, the average change in various sample dimensions, and the average T6 hardness.
Table IV indicates that the E36-Zr samples exhibited more isotropic shrinkage than the Ampal A36 control samples. This means that there was less distortion in the samples prepared using the zirconium-doped aluminum than in the samples prepared without any zirconium.
Referring now to
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Moreover, a comparison of
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Looking at
The most notable observation is that when 0.2 weight percent tin was added to the 0.2 weight percent zirconium-doped aluminum powder (screened at +325), a Young's modulus of almost 80 GPa was observed. A Young's modulus in the range of 70 to 80 GPa is comparable to that of a wrought alloy of the same constituents. For most sintered aluminum alloys, a Young's modulus typically falls in the range of 50 to 65 GPa. Accordingly, finding a powder composition that has a Young's modulus of this magnitude was unexpected and surprising.
Although some formulas have been detailed above, it will be appreciated that the zirconium-doped aluminum powder may be mixed with additional alloying elements as well. Tables V-VII below provide powder formulations of a 431D-AlN—Zr powder, a 7068-AlN—Zr powder, and a 431D-SiC—Zr powder, respectively.
The Al—Zn—Mg—Cu—Sn master alloy is 85.9 wt % Al, 2.64 wt % Cu, 3.48 wt % Mg, 7.74 wt % Zn, and 0.24 wt % Sn.
In these formulations, the zirconium-doped aluminum powder is blended with other powders including master alloys, elemental powders, and ceramic strengtheners to further target specific mechanical properties. However, in each of these blends, it should be noted that the primary source of zirconium is the zirconium-doped aluminum alloy.
Referring now to
It should be appreciated that various other modifications and variations to the preferred embodiments can be made within the spirit and scope of the invention. Therefore, the invention should not be limited to the described embodiments. To ascertain the full scope of the invention, the following claims should be referenced.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. provisional patent application No. 61/389,512 entitled “Aluminum Powder Metal Alloying Method” filed on Oct. 4, 2010. The contents of this application is hereby incorporated by reference as if set forth in its entirety herein.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US11/54741 | 10/4/2011 | WO | 00 | 3/6/2013 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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61389512 | Oct 2010 | US |