The present invention relates to a gold alloy and more specifically to a green gold alloy. It also relates to an item including a timepiece, made wholly of this alloy or comprising on the surface a coating of this alloy.
Coloured 18K gold alloys are highly sought-after for the production of timepieces. The green gold alloy compositions available in the literature all contain silver and optionally zinc, copper, cadmium or a combination of several of these elements.
The addition of silver in a large proportion is the main parameter for ensuring the strongest possible tint. Thus, the most promising composition for 18K green gold alloys is that of the alloy Au750Ag250, with 75% Au and 25% Ag by weight, also known as electrum. However, silver dulls very quickly, and this represents one of the main disadvantages of this alloy category.
The aim of the invention is that of remedying the disadvantage cited above by proposing a novel green gold alloy with an enhanced tarnishing resistance.
For this purpose, the chemical composition of the gold alloy has been adapted. The gold alloy thus developed is an 18 carat alloy comprising silver, palladium and/or platinum.
More specifically, the gold alloy comprises, by weight, between 73% and 77% gold, between 20% and 24.5% silver, palladium and/or platinum with a total percentage for these two elements between 0.5% and 5%.
Advantageously, the invention relates to a ternary gold alloy consisting of gold, silver and palladium. Optionally, it can contain in small quantities, that is not more than 0.05% by weight for all the elements, one or more elements chosen from iridium, rhenium and ruthenium.
The addition of palladium makes it possible to obtain a similar tint to that of electrum while drastically reducing tarnishing of the alloy over time. A similar effect is observed with the addition of platinum.
Further features and advantages of the invention will become more apparent upon reading the following detailed description, with reference to the appended drawings.
The present invention relates to an 18 carat gold alloy more specifically intended for an application in the field of watchmaking or jewellery. It thus also relates to timepieces or pieces of jewellery made of this alloy. The term timepieces denotes both casing components such as a middle, a back, a bezel, a push-piece, a bracelet link, a flange, a dial, a hand, a dial index, an oscillating mass, etc., and movement components such as a plate, a bridge or a balance. According to the invention, said timepieces or pieces of jewellery are made wholly of said gold alloy or include on the surface a coating made of said gold alloy. In the case of an external casing component, the component is preferably coated with said gold alloy. In the case of an internal casing component, said component is made wholly or coated with said gold alloy. In the case of a coating, by way of example, the substrate can be made of brass or gold, for example, 18 carats. A more specific example is a dial 1 made wholly of said alloy or coated with said alloy, as shown in
More generally, said gold alloy can be used wholly or on the surface for any item. The field of application of the gold alloy according to the invention also covers the targets used in coating processes such as physical vapour deposition (PVD).
The gold alloy according to the invention comprises, by weight, between 73% and 77% gold, between 20% and 24.5% silver, palladium and/or platinum with a total percentage for these two elements between 0.5% and 5%.
Advantageously, the gold alloy comprises, by weight, between 73% and 77% gold, between 21% and 24.3% silver, palladium and/or platinum with a total percentage for these two elements between 0.7% and 4%.
Preferably, the gold alloy comprises, by weight, between 73.5% and 76.5% gold, between 22.5% and 24.3% silver, palladium and/or platinum with a total percentage for these two elements between 0.7% and 2.5%.
More preferably, the gold alloy comprises, by weight, between 74% and 76% gold, between 23.5% and 24.3% silver, palladium and/or platinum with a total percentage for these two elements between 0.7% and 1.5%.
Furthermore, the gold alloy optionally comprises, by weight, between 0 and 0.05% (inclusive) of one or more elements chosen from iridium, rhenium and ruthenium, the 0-0.05% range covering the total percentage of the or these element(s). Advantageously, the gold alloy comprises 0.0025% iridium by weight.
Preferably, the gold alloy consists in the proportions cited above of gold, silver, palladium and/or platinum and optionally of one or more of the elements chosen from iridium, rhenium and ruthenium.
To prepare the gold alloy, the different elements of the composition are melted before being cast. The cast ingot is then shaped by channel rolling, flat rolling, drawing or wire-drawing. It is deformed with a cold-working rate between 10% and 80% divided into several passes with, optionally, intermediate annealing operations carried out within a temperature range between 550° C. and 750° C., for a time between 5 minutes and 30 minutes. In the examples hereinafter, the samples are annealed at a temperature of 650° C. for 30 minutes. After cooling, the blanks are sized, for example, by machining. It can also be envisaged that the blanks be in the cold-worked state to facilitate machining, an annealing operation optionally being carried out after machining.
In the context of a coating with said gold alloy on a substrate, the deposition process can be a physical vapour deposition (PVD) or chemical vapour deposition (CVD) process.
The alloys obtained after deformation and annealed or in the form of coating have in the CIELAB colour space (as per the CIE No. 15, ISO 7724/1, DIN 5033 Teil 7, ASTM E-1164 standards) a value a* between −7 and 1, preferably between −5 and 0, and a value b* between 20 and 32, preferably between 22 and 30; the values a* and b* defining the tint of the alloy together. Furthermore, they have a value L between 80 and 95, the values L*a*b* defining the colour of the alloy together. According to the present invention, emphasis is placed more specifically on the values a* and b* which define the tint of the alloy. According to the invention, the gold alloy has a green tint.
These gold alloys have a hardness between 35 and 60 HV1, preferably between 40 and 55 HV1 in the cold-worked state. These gold alloys have a density between 15 and 17.
Table 1 gives the composition by weight of the reference electrum 18 carat gold alloy and of four 18 carat gold alloys according to the invention. The colorimetric values and the hardness (HV1) measured are also presented in Table 1 for certain compositions on deformed samples annealed at 650° C. for 30 minutes. The colorimetric values L*a*b* were measured with a KONICA MINOLTA CM-2600d spectrophotometer with an illuminant D65 and a viewing angle of 10°.
Little variation of the hardness is observed with values between 45 and 50 HV1 in the annealed state.
In
ΔE*[(L2*−L1*)2+(a2*−a1*)2+(b2−*b1*)2]1/2
It is noted that the addition of palladium reduces tarnishing significantly, which makes it comparable, or less susceptible than 2N gold to tarnishing.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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22163092.4 | Mar 2022 | EP | regional |