Modified brass alloys with improved stress relaxation resistance

Information

  • Patent Grant
  • 4259124
  • Patent Number
    4,259,124
  • Date Filed
    Thursday, October 11, 1979
    44 years ago
  • Date Issued
    Tuesday, March 31, 1981
    43 years ago
Abstract
An alloy system which exhibits improved resistance to stress relaxation at elevated temperatures utilizes additions of silicon or tin or mixtures of silicon and tin to a copper-zinc base to attain the stress relaxation performance. The composition and processing of this alloy system maintains at least 90% by weight alpha-phase within the alloy.
Description

BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
Material used for spring connection devices must exhibit the ability to maintain adequate contact pressure for the design life of any part formed from the material. This ability to maintain adequate contact pressure is the ability to resist stress relaxation over a period of time, especially at temperatures elevated above normal room temperature. The current trend in connector design has been to place greater emphasis upon the maintenance of high contact pressure on connector parts at mildly elevated temperatures to reduce problems which might develop as the service temperature of the parts increases. Alloy 260 is currently widely used for electrical connectors but tends to exhibit a rather poor stress relaxation resistance at temperatures of 75.degree. C. or higher. Accordingly, it is important that this widely used alloy be modified in such a manner so as to improve its elevated temperature stress relaxation performance.
It is important to any modifications of Alloy 260 that high conductivity alloy be maintained along with improved stress relaxation performance. Furthermore, bend formability should be maintained while any cost increase in the alloy should be held down as low as possible to keep such an alloy competitive in the market. Other performance characteristics such as stress corrosion, solderability, softening resistance and others should not be significantly degraded below those properties shown by Commercial Alloy 260. It is desirable to the present invention that the performance of such an alloy exhibit approximately a 10-30% increase over projected stress remaining after 100,000 hours at 75.degree. C. or higher relative to Alloy 260. It is also desirable in the present invention that such an alloy maintain approximately a 20% IACS conductivity.
One alloy system which has been developed in the prior art is an improved beta-brass alloy as shown in U.S. Pat. No. 4,055,445 to Horace Pops. This particular patent teaches a brass alloy which exhibits a shape memory effect and which may contain from 25 to 40% by weight zinc along with 0.25 to 3.0% by weight silicon. It should be noted that the only useful alloy system within this broad range is shown by the cross hatched area in FIG. 3 of said patent, wherein the alloy should have a minimum amount of 25% by weight beta-phase up to 75%. Apparently, not only the particular alloy system itself but its specific processing is important in preparing the improved alloy of this particular patent. It is quite important to this patent that an annealing be performed so as to provide the above-mentioned minimum amount of beta-phase material within the alloy system.
It is a principal object of the present invention to provide an alloy system which exhibits improved stress relaxation resistance, particularly at elevated temperatures, when compared to Commercial Alloy 260.
It is a further object of the present invention to provide an alloy system as aforesaid which exhibits improved stress relaxation resistance and maintains approximate conductivity values found in Alloy 260.
It is an additional object of the present invention to provide an alloy system as aforesaid which is essentially an all alpha-phase alloy with up to 10% beta-phase within the alloy.
It is an additional object of the present invention to provide an alloy system as aforesaid which provides the noted benefits without appreciably increasing the cost of such an alloy.
Further objects and advantages will become apparent from a consideration of the following specification.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The alloy system of the present invention utilizes unique additions of tin or silicon or combinations of tin and silicon to an alpha-brass containing 8 to 34% by weight zinc to provide improvements in the stress relaxation behavior of such an alloy particularly at large degrees of cold reduction. The alloy system of the present invention meets these objectives without appreciably detrimentally affecting the electrical conductivity of the base copper-zinc alloy system. The elemental additions made to the base alloy also provide these increases in performance without appreciably affecting the processing of the alloy system, which contributes to keeping down the cost of such an alloy.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
The alloy system of the present invention accomplishes its objectives by adding an element selected from the group consisting of 0.05 to 2.0% by weight tin, 0.05 to 3.0% by weight silicon, or any combination thereof, to an alpha-brass containing 8 to 34% by weight zinc. The preferred compositional ranges for these particular additions should range from 0.1 to 2.0% by weight tin and from 0.1 to 2.0% by weight silicon. It should be noted that these additions exhibit an inverse relationship according to the amount of zinc in the alpha-brass base material. In other words, the higher amount of zinc in the base alloy, generally the lower the amount of tin or silicon or silicon plus tin. For example, one addition would contain 30% by weight zinc and 0.4% by weight silicon. The optimum compositional range for this alloy system should be from 20 to 32% by weight zinc and 0.1 to 1.5% by weight silicon, with or without 0.1 to 1.0% by weight tin. The most particular compositional range for this alloy is from 26 to 31% by weight zinc, 0.1 to 1.0% by weight silicon and 0.1 to 1.0% by weight tin, provided that the combined silicon plus tin is at least 0.3% by weight, balance copper.
The elemental additions discussed above maintain an essentially single-phase alpha alloy. It should be stressed that beta-phase formation should be avoided as much as possible. Although immediately after casting and solidification non-equilibrium beta-phase may be present within the alloy system, further processing of the alloy should try to keep the beta-phase to a maximum of 10 wt. percent. In particular, the alloy system of the present invention should not be annealed in an alpha plus beta or a beta-phase region. The presence of the beta-phase adversely affects the cold workability of the alloy as well as its stress corrosion resistance. Various other elements may be added to the alloy of the present invention to suit various purposes. For example, a grain refining element selected from the group consisting of 0.001 to 5.0% by weight iron, 0.001 to 5.0% by weight cobalt, 0.001 to 1.0% by weight chromium, 0.001 to 1.0% by weight zirconium, 0.001 to 1.0% by weight nickel, 0.001 to 1.0% by weight titanium, or any combination thereof may be added to the alloy. Various other elements such as lead may be added to improve the machinability of the alloy and elements such as arsenic may be added to improve the stress corrosion performance of the alloy. Naturally, the alloy of the present invention may also contain impurities common for alloys of this type and additional additives may be employed in the alloy, as desired, in order to emphasize particular characteristics or to obtain particularly desirable results.
It has normally been expected in this art that an increase in the yield strength of such an alloy should provide an improvement in the stress relaxation performance of the alloy. The improvements brought about by the alloy system of the present invention are considerably greater than those improvements which can be realized by increasing the yield stress alone. These modifications made in the present invention do raise the yield strength of Alloy 260 brass by as much as 13% while they raise the stress remaining values of the alloy by as much as 30%. It is this unexpected increase in the stress remaining value of the alloy system which provides the surprising benefits of the present invention.
The processing of the alloys of the present invention includes various stages of hot and cold working along with various annealing stages. The hot working of this alloy system should be done at a minimum temperature which is above the recrystallization temperature of the particular alloy being worked and which is below the solidus temperature of the alloy. This temperature will range between 500.degree. and 1000.degree. C. or preferably between 600.degree. and 900.degree. C. An optional step after hot working in the processing can be a diffusion annealing step. This annealing will utilize a temperature range of from 200.degree. to 800.degree. C. for 1 to 24 hours or preferably a range of 400.degree. to 700.degree. C. for 1 to 12 hours. The alloy can then be subjected to a milling step, whether or not it undergoes the annealing step, in order to clean the surface of the worked alloy and prepare it for further working. The alloy may then be cold worked with up to but not including a 100% reduction in area and preferably a 10 to 98% reduction in cross-sectional area. The cold worked material can then be subjected to an annealing step at 150.degree. to 900.degree. C. for enough time to recrystallize the alloy to a grain size of 0.005 to 0.05 mm. This annealing can be accomplished in cycles with cold working steps provided that cold working is that last step of the cycle. Cleaning of the worked material can be performed after any one of the annealing steps and not necessarily after each annealing step.





The present invention will be more readily understood from a consideration of the following illustrative examples.
EXAMPLE I
Alloys of the present invention were all made by adding the elemental additions to molten copper at approximately 1100.degree. C. The zinc was added at approximately 1050.degree. C. and all ingots were poured at 950.degree. to 1050.degree. C. These ingots were then soaked at 800.degree. C. for 2 hours prior to hot working by rolling down to a 0.48" gage and then both rolled surfaces were milled to a final gage of 0.4". Subsequent processing consisted of cold working up to a 90 % reduction with interanneals of 550.degree. C. for one hour in air between each cold working pass. The material utilized in this processing was given a final anneal such that the grain size of the alloy was approximately 0.010 mm.
Various alloys were cast in air as 10 lb. ingots with the compositions in weight percent as shown in Table I. Four control alloys of copper-30% zinc were cast and the average properties of the four controls were utilized at subsequent measurements. An additional alloy of commercially processed copper-30% zinc brass was also utilized. The appropriate amounts of the required elements were added to molten copper and the melts were poured through a tundish into a chilled mold. The processing of the alloys consisted of soaking at 800.degree. C. for 2 hours followed by hot rolling to 0.48" and surface milling down to 0.4". The alloys were subsequently cold rolled with intermediate annealing. This annealing was utilized to provide a grain size in the alloy prior to a final cold reduction of 0.01 mm. The final cold rolling reductions were either 35% or 60%, which values were selected for property measurement at each point.
Samples were machined from the 0.03" final gage material after cold working and were tested for their stress relaxation behavior in the longitudinal direction at 75.degree. C. Initial loading was set at 80% of the 0.2% offset yield stress for each alloy. Data for percent stress remaining at 1,000 or more hours of testing were extrapolated to 100,000 hours. The logarithm of stress remaining versus the logarithm of time and hours was assumed to be a linear relationship. The results are presented in Table II.
TABLE I______________________________________NOMINAL COMPOSITIONS OF ALLOYS CompositionAlloy No. % Zn % Si % Sn % Cu______________________________________Control 30 -- -- Rem.Commercial Alloy 260 30 -- -- Rem.C246 20 0.8 -- Rem.C247 27 0.4 -- Rem.C253 27 0.4 -- Rem.C167 27 0.8 -- Rem.A947 30 -- 0.15 Rem.A948 30 -- 0.5 Rem.C248 27 0.4 0.5 Rem.C311 27 0.3 0.4 Rem.C312 27 0.4 0.3 Rem.C313 27 0.5 0.2 Rem.C314 27 0.6 0.1 Rem.______________________________________
TABLE II__________________________________________________________________________ALLOY PROPERTIES Stress Relaxation Behavior Actual Extrapolated Extrapolated 1,000 H. 100,000 H. 100,000 H. MBR (in Initial % Stress % Stress StressAlloy % CW 0.2% YS UTS % Elong. 1/64")* Stress Remaining Remaining Remaining__________________________________________________________________________Control 35 71.4 79.7 7.7 4 57.1 76.8 66.9 38.2 60 86.1 99.6 2.8 16 68.9 70.4 59.4 40.9CommercialAlloy 260 60 85.8 102.0 2.5 N.A. 68.6 68.1 56.9 39.0C246 35 77.5 91.8 8.0 4 62.0 83.4 79.4 49.2 60 88.7 108.2 2.5 16 70.9 82.0 75.8 53.7C247 35 75.8 88.7 6.5 4 60.6 82.6 76.7 46.5 60 87.6 105.5 2.5 16 70.1 75.5 66.9 46.9C253 35 78.5 90.7 6.0 4 62.8 82.4 75.7 47.5 60 90.9 106.0 2.0** 16 72.7 74.9 66.2 48.1C167 35 77.0 88.0 9.0 3 61.6 84.4 77.5 47.7 60 92.7 109.4 2.5 16 74.1 82.4 72.0 53.4A947 35 72.4 78.8 5.5 N.A. 57.9 81.4 71.2 41.2 60 89.9 101.4 1.5 N.A. 71.9 73.7 61.2 44.0A948 35 77.5 84.1 4.5 4 62.0 82.8 73.4 45.0 60 93.3 102.7 1.5 20 74.6 75.4 62.9 46.9C248 35 80.9 91.5 6.0 4 64.7 84.4 79.0 51.1 60 93.2 109.5 1.0** 20 74.6 77.3 69.3 51.7C311 35 81.9 90.3 6.1 5 65.5 82.0 75.1 49.2 60 95.4 108.1 2.9 16 76.3 75.2 65.0 49.6C312 35 81.8 91.2 6.8 4 65.4 82.7 76.6 50.1 60 93.1 107.0 2.4 16 74.5 77.0 66.9 49.8C313 35 83.2 92.8 7.5 4 66.6 85.2 79.6 53.0 60 98.9 108.1 2.8 16 79.1 75.9 65.9 52.1C314 35 83.3 93.5 6.7 4 66.6 83.4 77.0 51.3 60 96.1 108.6 2.8 16 76.9 76.3 66.7 51.3__________________________________________________________________________ *In transverse direction **Broke outside gage marks N.A. Not Available YS, UTS, Initial Stress and Stress Remaining values are all in ksi.
As can be seen from Table II, the alloys according to the present invention exhibit surprising stress relaxation resistance behavior when compared to either Commercial Alloy 260 or a similar laboratory manufactured material. The Stress Remaining portion of Table II extrapolated to 100,000 hours indicates that the benefits derived from the present invention are more than can be expected from a simple increase in yield strength compared to the base alloys. For example, while the yield strength of Alloy C247, the composition of which falls within the present invention, is only 4.4 ksi and 1.5 ksi at 35% cold worked and 60% cold worked greater than the Control Alloy, the Stress Remaining at 100,000 Hours is 8.3 and 6.0 ksi greater at these cold working reductions than the Control Alloy. This clearly demonstrates the unexpected and surprising improvement in stress relaxation resistance brought about by the alloys of the present invention.
EXAMPLE II
The alloys listed in Table I were processed as described in Example I and the Stress Remaining after 100,000 Hours was determined based on Initial Stress levels of 60 and 70 ksi corresponding to hard temper brass and spring temper brass, respectively. The percentage difference over the average Cu-30% Zn base alloy was also measured. The results are shown in Table III.
Electrical conductivities for each of these alloys were measured in various degrees of worked and annealed conditions. These results are shown in Table IV.
TABLE III__________________________________________________________________________STRESS REMAINING AFTER 100,000 HOURS AND IMPROVEMENT OVER BRASS CONTROLSBASED ON INITIAL STRESS LEVELS OF 60 AND 70 KSI 60 ksi Initial Stress 70 ksi Initial Stress % Difference % Difference Nominal 100,000 H. Over Average 100,000 H. Over AverageAlloy No. Composition % SR SR Cu-30 Zn % SR SR Cu-30 Zn__________________________________________________________________________Average ofCu-30 Zn Cu-30 Zn 65.4 39.2 -- 60.0 42.0 --ControlsC246 Cu-20 Zn-0.8 Si 80.2 48.1 +23 76.2 53.3 +27C247 Cu-27 Zn-0.4 Si 77.3 46.4 +18 67.0 46.9 +12C253 Cu-27 Zn-0.4 Si 78.4 47.0 +20 68.8 48.2 +15C167 Cu-27 Zn-0.8 Si 78.2 46.9 +20 73.8 51.7 +23A947 Cu-30 Zn-0.15 Sn 69.7 41.8 +7 62.6 43.8 +4A948 Cu-30 Zn-0.5 Sn 75.1 45.0 +15 66.7 46.7 +11C248 Cu-27 Zn-0.4 Si-0.5 Sn 83.6 50.2 +28 73.8 51.7 +23C311 Cu-27 Zn-0.3 Si-0.4 Sn 80.2 48.1 +23 70.9 49.6 +18C312 Cu-27 Zn-0.4 Si-0.3 Sn 82.4 49.4 +26 71.7 50.2 +20C313 Cu-27 Zn-0.5 Si-0.2 Sn 86.8 52.1 +33 75.9 53.1 +27C314 Cu-27 Zn-0.6 Si-0.1 Sn 83.6 50.2 +28 73.6 51.5 +23__________________________________________________________________________
TABLE IV______________________________________uz,8/25 CONDUCTIVITY PROPERTIES*Alloy No. Condition Conductivity (% IACS)______________________________________Control 35% CW 26.0C246 Annealed 18.3C247 Annealed 21.9C253 Annealed 22.0C167 Annealed 18.7A947 35% CW 26.3A948 35% CW 25.1C248 Annealed 21.1C311 60% CW 20.5C312 Annealed 21.7C313 60% CW 18.5C314 Annealed 19.4______________________________________ *Values for conductivity in the cold worked condition are typically 1.5 t 2.5% IACS lower than the annealed values.
It can readily be seen from Table III that the silicon or tin additions to the copper-zinc base provide significant improvements in the stress remaining values over the average of the copper-30 zinc controls. It is quite apparent from Table III that the improvements brought about by the silicon and tin additions appear to be concentration dependent in that the percentage difference over the average control values increases as the percentage of silicon and tin increases in the base alloy. It can further be seen from Table III that it is the combination of silicon and tin which provides the greatest consistent improvement in stress relaxation performance throughout the specified alloys at a given level of conductivity. This improvement brought about by the combination of silicon and tin appears to be a result of a synergistic combination of these two elements since it would be expected from the silicon and tin results alone that a lower amount of improvement would result from a combination of these elements. For example, Alloy C247 at 60 ksi initial stress exhibits an 18% improvement over the control alloy values. Alloy A948 exhibits a 15% improvement at the same initial stress value. Alloy C248, which contains a mixture of the same amounts of silicon and tin found in Alloys C247 and A948, respectively, exhibits a 28% improvement over the control values at the same initial stress. It would not be expected that simply adding these two elements together in a copper-zinc base would provide such a large improvement.
It should be noted from Table IV that in most instances the addition of silicon or a mixture of silicon plus tin to a copper-zinc base reduces the electrical conductivity somewhat when compared to the control material. There appears to be a trade off point between desired conductivity and desired resistance to stress relaxation. The large percentage improvements demonstrated by the silicon and silicon plus tin additions to the base alloy in Table III offset somewhat the relatively small decrease in conductivity exhibited by these same alloys in Table IV. It can be seen, therefore, that the most preferred embodiment for the alloys of the present invention would be an alloy system which contains both silicon and tin. Such a combination would provide the desired stress relaxation performance benefits without greatly reducing the conductivity values also desired in such an alloy.
This invention may be embodied in other forms or carried out in other ways without departing from the spirit or essential characteristics thereof. The present embodiment is therefore to be considered as in all respects illustrative and not restrictive, the scope of the invention being indicated by the appended claims, and all changes which come within the meaning and range of equivalency are intended to be embraced therein.
Claims
  • 1. A method for producing an essentially single-phase alpha alloy which is hot workable and which is particularly resistant to stress relaxation at elevated temperatures, said method comprising the steps of:
  • casting an alloy whose composition is selected to provide said hot workability and said resistance to stress relaxation at elevated temperatures, said alloy consisting essentially of 0.1 to 2.0% by weight tin, 0.1 to 2.0% by weight silicon, provided that the combined silicon plus tin content of said alloy is at least 0.3% by weight, 20 to 34% by weight zinc, and the balance copper;
  • hot working said alloy at a temperature above the recrystallization temperature of said alloy and below the solidus temperature of said alloy;
  • cold working said alloy to provide a 10 to 98% reduction in area;
  • annealing said worked alloy at 150.degree. to 900.degree. C. to recrystallize said alloy to a grain size of 0.005 to 0.050 mm; and
  • cold working being accomplished in cycles with said annealing provided that a cold working step is the last step of said cycles.
  • 2. A method according to claim 1, wherein said alloy consists essentially of from 0.1 to 1.0% by weight tin, 0.1 to 1.5% by weight silicon, 20 to 32% by weight zinc, and the balance copper.
  • 3. A method according to claim 1, wherein said alloy consists essentially of from 0.1 to 1.0% by weight for each of silicon and tin, 26 to 31% by weight zinc, and the balance copper.
  • 4. A method according to claim 1, wherein said beta-phase in the alloy is kept to a maximum of 10% by weight throughout the processing of the alloy.
  • 5. A method according to claim 1, wherein said alloy is annealed at 200.degree. to 800.degree. C. for 1 to 24 hours after said hot working but before said cold working.
  • 6. A method according to claim 1, wherein said hot working is at 500.degree. to 1000.degree. C.
  • 7. A method according to claim 1, wherein the surface of said alloy is milled or cleaned after said hot working but before said cold working.
Parent Case Info

This is a division of application Ser. No. 920,131, filed June 28, 1978, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,205,984.

US Referenced Citations (4)
Number Name Date Kind
2394673 Edmunds Feb 1946
3816109 Crane et al. Jun 1974
3900349 Costas Aug 1975
3956027 Parikh et al. May 1976
Non-Patent Literature Citations (1)
Entry
Uhlig, "Corrosion and Corrosion Control", 2nd Edition, 1971, John Wiley & Sons, Inc., New York, pp. 326-329, 332, 333.
Divisions (1)
Number Date Country
Parent 920131 Jun 1978