Applicant claims, under 35 USC §119, the benefit of priority of the filing date of a Patent Cooperation Treaty patent application, Application No. PCT/FR2004/003002, filed on Nov. 24, 2004, which is incorporated herein by reference, wherein Patent Cooperation Treaty patent application Serial Number PCT/FR2004/03002 was not published under PCT Article 21(2) in English. Applicant also claims, under 35 USC §119, the benefit of priority of the filing date of a French patent application, Serial Number FR 03 14000, filed on Nov. 28, 2003, which is incorporated herein by reference.
The invention relates to aluminum alloy strips coated on one or both sides with a brazing alloy, intended for manufacturing of brazed parts, and particularly heat exchangers for automobiles or buildings, and more particularly for parts assembled by fluxless brazing under a controlled atmosphere.
The use of structurally hardened core alloys for heat exchangers (particularly in the 6xxx series: Al—Mg—Si) was very frequent as long the vacuum brazing type process was used. This practice was terminated when the brazing technology changed and was replaced by brazing under a controlled atmosphere with Nocolok® non-corrosive flux, related to the high acquisition and maintenance costs of vacuum furnaces. The Nocolok® process imposes strict constraints on the use of magnesium alloys, since magnesium reacts with the flux used to dissolve the oxide layer, and makes it inoperative. The limit for the content is of the order of 0.3%. A very large amount of the flux would be necessary for higher contents, which would make the operation extremely expensive.
Moreover, the resistance to corrosion of a large number of strips for exchangers is based on the formation of an anodic layer at the core/cladding interface which imposes a very low content of silicon in the core. For example, this is the case of alloys described in patent EP 0326337 (Alcan).
Therefore 6xxx alloys were very largely replaced by 3xxx alloys with low magnesium and low silicon contents and the structural hardening effect was lost.
Type 3xxx core alloys with structural hardening were recently proposed, for example in patent EP 0718072 (Hoogovens Aluminum Walzprodukte) and in patent application EP 1254965 (SAPA Heat Transfer). In both cases, no modification has been made to the strips to improve their brazability in a standard Nocolok® furnace. Consequently, either the magnesium content must be limited to a relatively low value (for example less than 0.35% as in the case of application EP 1254965), but the structural hardening effect is then reduced relatively small, or the quantity of flux deposited has to be increased or an alternative flux has to be used such as cesium flux described in U.S. Pat. No. 5,771,962 (Ford). In both cases, this significantly increases the cost of the operation.
The invention is intended to propose a material that has structural hardening properties, and also good brazability in existing Nocolok® lines.
The subject of the invention is a process for the assembly of aluminum alloy sheets as defined above including fluxless brazing under a controlled atmosphere at a temperature of between 580 and 620° C. fast cooling and possibly aging at a temperature of between 80 and 250° C. and in which at least one of the plates is composed of a core alloy with the following composition (% by weight):
When manufacturing heat exchangers, aging can be done during operation in the hot parts of the exchanger.
a and 1b show top and side views respectively of V test pieces used in the examples to evaluate brazability.
The invention is based on the selection of a particular composition for the core alloy, for fluxless brazing, in combination with the addition of the cladding alloy containing one or several elements modifying its surface properties, such as the surface tension or the composition of the oxide layer.
The core alloy contains manganese and copper as well as silicon and magnesium to enable hardening of Mg2Si by precipitation.
The silicon content must be more than 0.3% to enable the formation of a sufficient quantity of Mg2Si, but it must remain less than 1% if a sufficient difference is to be maintained between the melting temperatures of the core alloy and the cladding alloy.
The magnesium content is between 0.3 and 3.0%, and preferably between 0.35 and 0.7%. It must be sufficient to enable the formation of Mg2Si, and is not limited by the risk of reaction with the flux as in patent EP 1254965, since there is no flux. Unlike the teachings of patent application EP 1254965, the objective is not to achieve an excess silicon above the stoichiometric quantity to form Mg2Si, but on the contrary an excess of magnesium is required. However, magnesium can have a negative effect on formability, consequently it is desirable to limit it to 0.7% for applications requiring extensive forming.
Copper increases the mechanical strength of the alloy when it is in solid solution. Unlike the teachings of EP 1254965, the applicant did not observe any reduction in the resistance to corrosion beyond 0.3% provided that the value of 1% is not exceeded, since this is the limit at which copper precipitates. On the contrary, the presence of copper in solid solution increases the corrosion potential. Another reason for not exceeding 1% is to prevent the alloy melting temperature from dropping too much.
The cladding alloy is normally an aluminum alloy containing 4 to 15% of silicon, and possibly other additive elements such as Cu, Mg or Zn. One of the characteristics of the invention is that one or several elements are added to the cladding alloy to improve its wettability, from among the group composed of Ag, Be, Bi, Ce, La, Pb, Pd, Sb, Y and mischmetal, which is a mix of unseparated rare earth elements. This better wettability avoids the need to use a brazing flux, without operating under a vacuum.
The brazing alloy is usually clad onto the core alloy by co-rolling. If the brazing alloy is clad on a single face, the other face may be coated in a manner known by those of skill in the art by a sacrificial alloy, usually of the Al—Zn type designed to improve the resistance of the core alloy to corrosion.
The brazing alloy may also be deposited in the form of particles, particularly Al—Si particles, as for example described in patent EP 0568568 (Alcan International). For brazing under a controlled atmosphere, the brazing alloy particles are usually associated with flux particles, particularly a fluoride-based flux such as potassium fluoro-aluminate, and a binder such as a polymer resin. In this case, one particular advantage of the invention is to avoid the presence of a flux in the coating.
Between 0.05 and 0.5% bismuth and/or 0.01 to 0.5% yttrium may also be incorporated in the core alloy.
Fluxless brazing may be done under a controlled atmosphere, for example nitrogen or argon, at a temperature of between 580 and 620° C. which enables melting of the brazing alloy and also enables dissolution of the core alloy. This dissolution is followed by fast cooling, for example with blown air. The assembled part can be aged at a temperature of between 80 and 250° C.
For the manufacture of heat exchangers, it is sometimes possible to perform the aging during operation in the hottest parts of the exchanger, for example for automobile engine cooling radiator tubes.
Several core alloy plates were cast with the compositions shown in Table 1:
and plates of 4047 (Al-12% Si) cladding alloy or 4047+0.19% Bi cladding alloy or 4047+0.05% Y cladding alloy or 4047+0.05% Ca cladding alloy. Assemblies are made from these plates such that the thickness of the cladding alloy is equal to 10% of the total thickness. These assemblies are hot rolled, and then cold rolled so as to produce 0.3 mm thick clad strips. The strips are subject to a recovery heat treatment for 10 h at 260° C.
The test piece depicted in
A mark from A to E is assigned to the results, according to the following scale:
Table 2 contains the results:
The mechanical characteristics are measured on the M/4047+Bi, M+Bi/4047+Bi and M+Y/4047+Y composites together after brazing, and after various aging treatments. Table 3 shows the values obtained and compares them with an alloy N conventionally used for strips for use in heat exchangers with the following composition:
The very favourable effect of structural hardening on the mechanical strength, particularly after aging, can be seen clearly.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
03 14000 | Nov 2003 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
---|---|---|---|---|
PCT/FR2004/003002 | 11/24/2004 | WO | 00 | 5/26/2006 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
WO2005/061743 | 7/7/2005 | WO | A |
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Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
0718072 | Jun 1996 | EP |
1170118 | Jan 2002 | EP |
2489845 | Mar 1982 | FR |
2826979 | Jan 2003 | FR |
Number | Date | Country | |
---|---|---|---|
20070158386 A1 | Jul 2007 | US |