Claims
- 1. An ammunition having an armour piercing core material consisting essentially of a tungsten heavy alloy (WHA) kinetic energy penetrator that demonstrates adiabatic shearing and flow-softening under high deformation rate and high pressure conditions, said penetrator being prepared by:
- (a) forming a powder mixture having the general formula, in weight % W.sub.80-93 Fe.sub.5-19.5 (Ni,Mn,Co).sub.0.05-6, (C,Si,Ti,Al).sub.0.05-4, (Cr,Mo,V).sub.0.0-5 and where the amount of Fe and the amount of at least two members selected from Ni, C, Si, Ti, and Al are sufficient to provide a heat-treatable article,
- (b) converting the powder mixture to a dense, heat-treatable, tungsten alloy article by hot consolidation of the mixture at a temperature below the intermetallic phase formation temperature between tungsten and iron but at a temperature at least sufficient to achieve at least 98.7% of theoretical maximum density, and
- (b) hardening the article with a heat treatment whereby the article is capable of being converted into the WHA penetrator.
- 2. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation temperature is at or below 1000 degrees C.
- 3. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation is selected from the group of hot pressing, hot isostatic pressing and hot extrusion.
- 4. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation is selected from the group consisting of hot pressing, hot isostatic pressing and hot extrusion) and the consolidation is sufficient to produce a fully dense, tungsten alloy article.
- 5. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation is at a temperature at or below 1000 degrees C., and is selected from the group consisting of hot pressing, hot isostatic pressing and hot extrusion.
- 6. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation is at a temperature at or below 1000 degrees C. and is hot pressing.
- 7. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation is at a temperature at or below 1000 degrees C. and is hot isostatic pressing.
- 8. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation is hot extrusion.
- 9. The ammunition of claim 1 where the hot consolidation temperature for the powder mixture is at or below 1000 degrees C., and the consolidation is selected from the group consisting of hot pressing, hot isostatic pressing and hot extrusion, and is sufficient to provide a fully dense, tungsten alloy article.
- 10. The ammunition of claim 1 where the tungsten alloy article contains carbon and the hardening is a martensitic heat treatment.
- 11. The ammunition of claim 1 where the tungsten alloy article contains a member selected from Ni, Al and Ti and the hardening is precipitation hardening.
- 12. The ammunition of claim 1 where the powder mixture has from 80 to 90 wt % W.
U.S. GOVERNMENT INTEREST
The invention described herein may be manufactured, used and licensed by or for the U.S. Government for U.S. Government purposes.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Foreign Referenced Citations (2)
Number |
Date |
Country |
47-21683 |
Jun 1972 |
JPX |
449753 |
Jun 1936 |
GBX |
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry |
International Journal of Refractory and Hard Metals, "Addition of Molybde Produces High Strength Heavy Alloys" p. 125, Sep. 1987. |