This application is the National Stage of PCT/RU2006/000491 filed on Sep. 25, 2006, which claims priority under 35 U.S.C. §119 of Russian Application No. 2005135024 filed on Nov. 14, 2005, Russian Application No. 2005135025 filed on Nov. 14, 2005, and Russian Application No. 2005135026 filed on Nov. 14, 2005. The international application under PCT article 21 (2) was published in English.
This invention relates to powder metallurgy, more specifically, to methods of fabricating hard alloy items. The invention can be used as an iron, cobalt or nickel base binder for the fabrication of diamond cutting tools for the construction industry and stone cutting, including segmented cutting discs of different designs and wires for reinforced concrete and asphalt cutting used in the renovation of highway pavements, runways in airports, upgrading of metallurgical plants, nuclear power plants, bridges and other structures, monolithic reinforced concrete cutting drills, as well as discs and wires for the quarry production of natural stone and large scale manufacturing of facing construction materials.
Binders determine the design of the tools. Depending on the type of the binder, the case material and the method of diamond containing layer bonding to the case are selected. The physical and mechanical properties of binders predetermine the possible shapes and sizes of abrasive diamond tools.
Known is a binder for the fabrication of diamond tools (RU 2172238 C2, published Aug. 20, 2001, cl. B24D 3/06) comprising copper as the base and tin, nickel, aluminum and ultrafine grained diamond as additives.
Disadvantages of said material are its insufficient wear resistance, hardness, strength and impact toughness.
Known is a binder for the fabrication of diamond tools (SU 1167840 A1, published Oct. 10, 1999) comprising an iron group metal, titanium carbide and a metal-metalloid compound. The binder further comprises zirconium carbide for higher binding strength and more reliable diamond grain fixation in the binder.
Disadvantages of said material also are its insufficient hardness and strength.
Known is a binder for the fabrication of diamond tools (SU 1021586 A, published Jun. 7, 1983, cl. B24D3/06) with cobalt as the base that comprises chromium carbide, copper, tin, iron and nickel as additives.
Disadvantages of said material are its insufficient wear resistance, hardness, strength and impact toughness.
Known is a binder for the fabrication of diamond tools with cobalt as the base and cobalt compounds, silicon, sulfur, magnesium, sodium and aluminum as additives (JP 7207301, published Aug. 8, 1995).
Disadvantages of said binder also are its insufficient hardness and strength.
Known is a binder for the fabrication of diamond tools (RU 2172238 C2, published Aug. 20, 2001, cl. B24D 3/06) comprising copper as the base and tin, nickel, aluminum and ultrafine powder (UFP) of diamond as additives.
Disadvantages of said material are its insufficient wear resistance, hardness, strength and impact toughness.
Known is a binder for the fabrication of diamond tools comprising over 40 wt. % nickel and alloying additives (JP 2972623 B2, published Feb. 2, 2005).
Disadvantages of said binder also are its insufficient hardness and strength.
Therefore the objective of this invention is the synthesis of binders for the fabrication of diamond tools having higher wear resistance without a significant increase in the sintering temperature, as well as higher hardness, strength and impact toughness.
Below are examples of a few types of binders for the fabrication of diamond tools according to this invention in which the objective of this invention is achieved by adding an iron group metal as the main component of the binder composition and alloying additives in the form of nanosized powder.
The binder for the fabrication of diamond tools comprises iron and an alloying additive in the form of nanosized powder. The content of the alloying additive in the binder is 1-15 wt. %.
In specific embodiments of this invention, the alloying additives are tungsten carbide, tungsten, aluminum oxide, zirconium dioxide or niobium carbide.
Also, in specific embodiments of this invention, the alloying additives are UFP diamonds coated with silver or nickel.
In another embodiment of this invention, the binder for the fabrication of diamond tools comprises cobalt and an alloying additive in the form of nanosized powder. The content of the alloying additive in the binder is 1-15 wt. %.
In specific embodiments of this invention, the alloying additives are tungsten carbide, tungsten, aluminum oxide, zirconium dioxide or niobium carbide.
Also, in specific embodiments of this invention, the alloying additives are UFP diamonds coated with silver or nickel.
In accordance with the third embodiment of this invention, the binder for the fabrication of diamond tools comprises nickel and an alloying additive in the form of nanosized powder. The content of the alloying additive (AA) in the binder is, wt. %
1.6<AA≦15.
In specific embodiments of this invention, the alloying additives are tungsten carbide, tungsten, aluminum oxide, zirconium dioxide or niobium carbide.
Also, in specific embodiments of this invention, the alloying additives are UFP diamonds coated with silver or nickel.
The presence of an iron group metal as the main component of the binder composition provides the binder satisfying the following requirements:
a) good wetting in relation to diamond;
b) good fixation of the diamond grains;
c) self-cutting, i.e. the situation in which the blunting of diamond grains causes wear-out of the tool that enhances the chipping out of the blunted grains and the uncovering of the cutting edges of new grains;
d) sufficient heat stability and a good heat conductivity;
e) a minimum friction coefficient in contact with the material to be processed;
f) linear expansion coefficient close to that of diamond;
g) lack of chemical interaction with the material to be processed and the cooling liquid.
Alloying additives of this composition have high hardness, heat resistance and heat stability of the binders.
The binders can be synthesized by powder metallurgy, i.e. sintering followed by pressing at the sintering temperature. This method is highly productive because the overall duration of material heating to the sintering temperature, exposure to the sintering temperature, pressing and cooling to room temperature does not exceed 15 minutes. The high heating rates and the uniform temperature distribution in the processing chamber are provided by passing electric current through the sintering mold which is used also as the pressing mold. Upon the completion of the exposure to the sintering temperature, pressing is started immediately in order for the required density and shape of the manufactured items to be maintained. The pressing mould design allows the process to be conducted in an inert or protective atmosphere, this increasing tool quality.
Contents of the alloying additives that are below the minimum limit of the concentration range shown above (1 wt. % for iron and cobalt and 1.6 wt. % for nickel) are insufficient for their homogeneous distribution in the bulk of the material, and their effect on the structure and properties of the resultant material is negligible. If, on the other hand, the maximum limit of the abovementioned concentration range (15 wt. %) is exceeded, the concentration of the alloying material (the nanocomponent) becomes excessive. As the alloying material has a higher hardness compared with iron group metals, it acts as a stress concentrator thus strongly embrittling the material and reducing the mechanical properties and wear resistance of the binder.
Tables 1, 2 and 3 show examples illustrating binder properties as a function of composition.
The binder materials according to this invention will provide for better economic parameters as compared to the counterpart materials of the world's leading manufacturers with respect to the price/lifetime and price/productivity criteria. For example, the diamond containing segments for asphalt cutting discs are operated in a superhard abrasive medium. The conventional matrix hardening method by introducing tungsten carbide has a concentration limitation due to the consequent increase in the required sintering temperature (this, in turn, reduces the strength of the diamonds and causes additional wear of the process equipment).
The introduction of alloying additives in the form of nanosized particles in the binder allows increasing its wear resistance without a significant increase of the sintering temperature. Granite cutting disc segments are used in the large scale manufacturing of construction facing materials and are therefore a large scale product, too. Their production costs and unit operational costs are an important economic factor in the respective production industries. The transition from conventional binders to iron group metal base binders will reduce the raw material costs. In the meantime, the operational parameters (wear resistance, hardness and impact toughness) of such binders will be retained by introducing nanosized particles of WC, Al2O3 and other additives.
The materials used as binders for the synthesis of pearlines suitable for hot pressing have largely reached their operational limits. Further development is oriented to the hot isostatic pressing technology which requires very large capital investment in process equipment, often reaching millions dollars. On the other hand, hot pressing combined with the introduction of nanosized particles allows pearlines to be obtained with parameters close to those obtained using the hot isostatic pressing technology.
The introduction of alloying additions, i.e. tungsten carbide, tungsten, aluminum oxide, zirconium dioxide or niobium carbide, in the form of nanosized powder provides for the high strength, heat conductivity and cracking resistance of the material. The controlled small additions of the alloying components provide for a unique combination of properties, i.e. strength, hardness, cracking resistance and cutting area friction coefficient thereby allowing the service life of tools operated under extremely high loading conditions to be increased by 10-20% compared to the initial ones, without compromise in the cutting capacity.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2005135024 | Nov 2005 | RU | national |
2005135025 | Nov 2005 | RU | national |
2005135026 | Nov 2005 | RU | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/RU2006/000491 | 9/25/2006 | WO | 00 | 5/29/2008 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2007/055616 | 5/18/2007 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
5482530 | Höhne | Jan 1996 | A |
6254658 | Taniuchi et al. | Jul 2001 | B1 |
6319460 | Fang | Nov 2001 | B1 |
6663682 | Baldoni et al. | Dec 2003 | B2 |
20020055002 | Toshima | May 2002 | A1 |
20050180875 | Kang | Aug 2005 | A1 |
20060093859 | Konyashin et al. | May 2006 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
WO2004007784 | Jan 2004 | DE |
7-207301 | Aug 1995 | JP |
2-972623 | Sep 1998 | JP |
2167262 | May 2001 | RU |
2172238 | May 2001 | RU |
23815 | Jul 2002 | RU |
2207320 | Jun 2003 | RU |
2247794 | Mar 2005 | RU |
1021586 | Jun 1983 | SU |
1057263 | Nov 1983 | SU |
1703427 | Jan 1992 | SU |
1167840 | Oct 1999 | SU |
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Number | Date | Country | |
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20090107291 A1 | Apr 2009 | US |