The invention relates to a process for manufacturing composite metal parts by the incorporation of internal fibrous reinforcements, particularly ceramic fibers, and also relates to the preform used for implementing the process and to the composite metal part obtained.
The invention relates to the field of metal matrix composites or MMCs.
To reduce the weight of metal parts while still increasing their mechanical strength, both in tension and in compression, it is usually recommended to incorporate fibers, for example carbon fibers, aramid (for example Kevlar®) fibers or ceramic fibers, into the metal matrix. The ceramic fibers, especially silicon carbide SiC fibers, are used in particular for high-performance applications at high temperatures required in the aviation or aerospace fields or in the safety field, for example for braking (with ceramic brakes).
The manufacture of these parts involves the prior production of inserts from metal-coated filaments. The metal provides in particular the elasticity and the flexibility necessary for handling them.
A known process for manufacturing such reinforced parts, described for example in the patent document FR 2 886 290, comprises the formation of a coil of coated filaments wound around a mandrel. The coil is then incorporated into a main metal body or container in which a cavity has been machined beforehand, so as to form a housing for the insert. The depth of the cavity is greater than the height of the coil and is shaped in order for a lid tenon to be inserted thereinto.
The lid is welded under vacuum to the periphery of the cavity in order to be sealed during the hot isostatic compaction step, during which the lid is deformed and the coil is compressed by the tenon.
The hot isostatic compaction technique consists in placing the part in an enclosure to which a high pressure, of the order of 1000 bar, and a likewise high temperature (of the order of 1000° C.), are applied for a few hours.
During this treatment, the gaps between coated filaments disappear by creep, the metal sheaths of the coated filaments are welded together and welded to the walls of the cavity, by diffusion welding, in order to form a dense assembly composed of a metal alloy within which the ceramic fibers extend. The part obtained is then machined to the desired shape.
The process makes it possible to manufacture axisymmetric aeronautical parts, such as rotor disks or integrally bladed disks (called blisks), but also nonaxisymmetric parts, such as links, shafts, cylinder actuator bodies, and casings.
However, machining the cavity in the main body is a difficult operation to carry out, especially because of the small fillet radii in the bottom of the cavity between the bottom surface and the side walls. This small fillet radius is necessary in order for the insert, which has a rectangular cross section and is formed from filaments of small radius, to be fitted with as small a clearance as possible. The machining of the corresponding tenon in the lid is not easy either, because of nonemergent angles and because of the fact that it is necessary to have a shape that perfectly matches the cavity.
In addition, when the parts to be produced are not axisymmetric but oblong shape, with an oval shape or else with rectilinear portions, precise fitting over long lengths is difficult to achieve. This is even more difficult for inserts formed from very rigid coated filaments, for example ceramic fibers, which require the formation of housings in which they fit perfectly. The lid must fit exactly into the cavity so as not to let the fibers escape.
The machining therefore generally incurs high manufacturing costs. In particular the machining of the main body of the container with its lid represents a substantial fraction of the total cost of the parts. To reduce these costs and to simplify the steps, the Applicant has developed a manufacturing process in which the cavity houses a rectilinear insert together with the lid, the dimensions of which are set so as to allow it to be positioned on this insert. The cavity is then sealed by a shrink-fitting operation, by reducing the dimensions of the lid when cold, for example by immersing it in liquid nitrogen, after which it expands in the cavity so as to produce a tight fit. The solution thus produces a seal, thereby simplifying the shape of the cavity.
This process is described in the patent application filed on Jul. 4, 2008 under the number FR 08/54589.
However, this solution introduces a high risk of loss of sealing in the cavity of the container housing the lid and the insert during the subsequent hot isostatic compaction operation, for the following reasons.
This operation consists in subjecting the container-insert-lid assembly to a double temperature-rise/pressure-rise cycle. The pressure is exerted by a compacting gaseous fluid, generally argon.
Under the effect of the temperature increase, the stresses generated by the shrink-fitting operation between the lid and the container relax. At the same time, the pressure external to the container also increases and the compacting gas infiltrates into the cavity containing the insert, between the lid and the container. Such infiltration may prevent or degrade the compaction and the diffusion welding of the sheaths of the filaments of the insert to one another and/or to the walls of the cavity.
To solve this problem, the invention proposes a treatment in which the lid is prewelded to the container prior to the compaction phase.
More precisely, one subject of the present invention is a process for manufacturing composite metal parts by the incorporation of fibrous internal reinforcements, comprising the steps of machining in a metal body or container at least one cavity for housing an insert of corresponding shape comprising reinforcing fibers, of introducing a lid on the insert in the cavity of the container, the lid having walls held pressed against the walls of the facing container, of carrying out a hot isostatic compaction cycle on such a container-insert-lid assembly and of machining said assembly in order to obtain said part. This step of pressing the lid against the container is then continued by a diffusion prewelding heat treatment in which the temperature of the container-insert-lid assembly is raised and maintained, thereby fastening the lid to the container.
Under these conditions, the isostatic compaction is optimized and no longer requires external closure of the container by the lid using a specific weld, thereby reducing the costs while still guaranteeing quality compaction owing to the absence of gas leaking into the insert via the internal preweld.
Preferably, the pretreatment is incorporated into the hot isostatic compaction cycle in which a solely thermal first phase is followed by an external hot pressing phase.
According to particular embodiments:
The subject of the invention is also a metal part preform assembled during the temperature-rise phase of the process defined above. This preform comprises the metal body or container, the reinforcing fiber insert being placed in the cavity formed in the container together with the metal lid placed on the insert in said cavity and fastened to said container.
According to particular embodiments:
Other features and advantages of the invention will become apparent on reading the following detailed illustrative embodiment, with reference to the appended drawings which show, respectively:
a to 1c, schematic cross-sectional views of an example of the implementation of the three main steps of the heat treatment of the process according to the invention;
a and 2b, perspective see-through views of an example of an assembly operation for producing a metal part preform according to the invention; and
In this description, the positioning terms of the “upper” and “lower” type denote the location of objects with respect to the direction of the Earth's gravity.
Referring to the schematic cross-sectional view in
In the example shown in
The cavity 12, the insert 14 and the lid 16 are of complementary shape and machined so as to have, between them, no clearance or the smallest possible minimum clearance taking into account the technological constraints. In particular, the lid 16 and the container 10 have walls 16a and 10a that bear against each other by prior application of pressure.
Advantageously, a shrink-fitting operation is carried out between the facing walls of the lid and container by precooling the lid in liquid nitrogen. The lid then shrinks in all directions and is positioned in the cavity on the insert. Upon being heated up as the temperature rises during the prewelding phase that follows, the lid expands in all directions, and the facing walls of the lid and the container then press against each other forming a tight fit.
A hot diffusion prewelding cycle is then carried out in an appropriate enclosure (not shown) capable of subsequently performing the isostatic compaction. The temperature rise and the duration of this cycle are adapted so as to cause the metal of the container to diffuse. The prior pressurization is calculated so as to allow sufficient relaxation of the stresses during this temperature rise.
In the example, the metal is a titanium alloy and the welding temperature is between 850 and 1000° C. For titanium alloys, the temperature hold time is at least 30 minutes. This prewelding completely or at least partly fastens the lid to the container. Advantageously, the container and the lid are made of the same metal—a titanium alloy in the example. After this fastening treatment, the container 10 and the lid now form only a single entity surrounding the fibrous insert 14, as shown schematically in
The hot isostatic compaction operation is then carried out, as shown schematically in
The dimensions of the lid are calculated beforehand so that the upper face Fc of the lid 16 becomes, during pressurization, level with the upper face Fs of the container 10, knowing that the volume of the insert decreases by about 15 to 20%. At the end of the process, the container, the lid and the fibers are compacted, as indicated by the shrinkage volumes 18 and 19 shown cross-hatched in
The blank of the part is thus reinforced by the filaments imprisoned within the matrix. A final machining operation serves to obtain the part with the desired shape.
The perspective views shown in
The machined cavity 12 is rectilinear, with a flat bottom and walls perpendicular to the bottom. The surface where the bottom joins the walls has a small radius of curvature so as to allow the insert 14 to be fitted with as small a clearance as possible. The cavity comprises a central portion 12c and two annular end portions 12e and 12e′ forming longitudinal extensions on either side of the central portion.
The central portion 12c is intended to serve as housing for the fitting of the rectilinear insert 14. The insert is formed from an assembly of metal-coated ceramic fibers, the metal being titanium in the embodiment example.
The shape of the lid 16 is such as to surround the insert 14 once it has been placed in its housing. The lid 16 has an overall block shape and dimensions adjusted as close as possible to those of the cavity 12, with a central portion 16c and end portions 16e and 16e′ forming the longitudinal extensions of the central portion. The end portions allow the lid to surround the insert on its upper face Fi and on its end faces Fe and Fe′, i.e. on three different planes.
The height H of the end parts 16e and 16e′ of the lid corresponds to the height 16h of its central portion 16c plus that of the insert 14, and is slightly greater than the depth of the cavity 12. The end portions 16e and 16e′ of the lid each have a beveled face 16p and 16p′ leaving a space at the bottom of the cavity on the insert side. These faces define free spaces that will facilitate the deformation of the lid during compaction.
In the example, the step of fastening the lid to the container in order to obtain the preform 20 is advantageously preceded by a shrink-fitting operation. To do this, the temperature of the lid 12 is suddenly lowered, so as to cause it to shrink in all directions. One simple means of doing so is to immerse it in liquid nitrogen. The lid, after having been cooled, is then easily placed in the cavity. Upon expanding, the lid fits tightly in compression against the side walls of the container.
The isostatic compaction enclosure (not shown) conventionally includes means for regulating the heating within a wide temperature range, possibly up to 1000° C. and above, means for creating a vacuum and means for applying a high pressure of up to 1000 bar and above.
The temperature of the diffusion welding cycle is the temperature for conventionally welding the metal constituting the container and the lid, here a titanium alloy.
Advantageously, the heat treatment, in particular the prewelding, phases are carried out in the compaction installation. The prewelding and the compaction are thus in continuous concatenation.
The upper face Fc of the lid 16 sinks upon being pressurized up to 1000 bar in order to complete the hot isostatic compaction of the preform 20.
More precisely, the insert is formed from a bundle of fibers coated with a titanium alloy. As the treatment results in a volume reduction and a densification of this insert, the lid descends into the cavity in the manner of a piston. The transition zone formed by the beveled faces 16e and 16e′ allows the lid to deform without the shear forces causing any damage to the lid. The blank thus obtained is ready to be machined in order to produce the desired metal part.
The invention is not limited to the embodiment example described and shown.
The pressing of the lid onto the container may be carried out by any means within the competence of a person skilled in the art: by introducing a leaf spring, a mechanical spacer, etc.
Depending on the type of part to be machined, it is necessary to incorporate a number of inserts matched to the structure of the part to be reinforced.
Thus, in the link part 30 illustrated in
The process of the invention makes it possible under these conditions to produce any part incorporating one or more inserts in longitudinal portions of this part.
Moreover, the shape of the lid may vary and surround the insert partly or completely. In this case, several lids may surround the insert, by providing for example a through-cavity, an insert being placed in the middle of the cavity and two lids placed on either side of the insert from the two opposed faces of the container.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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09 58350 | Nov 2009 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP2010/068120 | 11/24/2010 | WO | 00 | 5/10/2012 |
Publishing Document | Publishing Date | Country | Kind |
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WO2011/064251 | 6/3/2011 | WO | A |
Number | Name | Date | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
20050086789 | Twigg | Apr 2005 | A1 |
20070020134 | Pursell | Jan 2007 | A1 |
20070051455 | Franchet et al. | Mar 2007 | A1 |
20090218837 | Mantkowski | Sep 2009 | A1 |
20110005061 | Masson et al. | Jan 2011 | A1 |
Number | Date | Country |
---|---|---|
1 527 842 | May 2005 | EP |
2 886 290 | Dec 2006 | FR |
2 919 284 | Jan 2009 | FR |
2 925 896 | Jul 2009 | FR |
Entry |
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International Search Report Issued Mar. 7, 2011 in PCT/EP10/068120 Filed Nov. 24, 2010. |
Number | Date | Country | |
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20120255961 A1 | Oct 2012 | US |