1. Field of the Invention
The invention relates in general to the thermomechanical manufacturing of dense articles from powders and, in particular, to a method of forming dense articles from less dense preformed bodies of powders wherein the preformed bodies are plasticized and compressed by a process of frictional heating.
2. Description of the Prior Art
The use of thermomechanical processes to bond or weld articles together and to form coatings is well known. The use of powder metallurgy to form net or near-net shape parts is also well known.
Heat generated by moving materials relative to one another under pressure had been previously proposed for the plasticizing of powdered materials so as to form extruded articles from those powdered materials. See, for example, Thomas et al. U.S. Pat. No. 5,262,123. Thomas et al. propose to plasticize powdered materials by frictional heating, and to extrude the resulting materials. The loose powdered materials may be confined in cavities in a consumable rotating probe, or confined between non-consumable counter-rotating members. In the proposed configuration where the loose powdered materials are confined in cavities within a consumable probe, the material of the probe is mixed with the loose powdered materials as they are plasticized, and the resulting mixed material is extruded. In the configuration where loose powdered materials are confined between non-consumable counter-rotating members, the loose powders are confined by some other supporting structure, such as a chamber, until the plasticized mass is extruded. Unconfined loose powders can not be utilized according to Thomas et al. Where a consumable probe confines powdered metal therewithin, the probe must have sufficient structural strength to withstand the loads applied by moving it and simultaneously urging it into engagement with an opposing member. Also, the material of which the probe or rod is composed must be a desirable component in the final article, because it will inevitably be there. Thomas et al do not utilize unconfined loose powders. The applicability of the teachings of Thomas et al. to a wide variety of applications, particularly irregular shapes, is thus limited. The extruded mass may be broken up and put through the process again. That is, according to Thomas et al., it may be reformed.
Childs et al. U.S. Pat. No. 4,397,622 discloses a friction-actuated “Conform” process in which loose particulate copper or aluminum is extruded under pressure to form elongated solid objects.
In friction welding, frictional forces may be used to bond together components made, for example, of dissimilar materials. U.S. Pat. No. 5,697,545 to Jennings et al., disclose a friction welding operation in which oscillatory relative movement between two solid components under load generates enough heat to weld the two solid components together. Powders are not involved.
In friction surfacing operations, frictional forces are used to clad the surface structure of an article. For example, U.S. Pat. No. 5,183,390 to Amos and U.S. Pat. No. 4,930,675 to Bedford et al. teach friction surfacing with material derived from a solid consumable friction rod. The solid rod or probe has sufficient strength to withstand the thermal and mechanical forces imposed upon it. The composition of the facing is determined largely by the composition of the rod. In conventional friction welding and friction surfacing operations, frictional forces are relied on to generate heat in an amount sufficient to locally plasticize solid materials.
In a different art, but also known, is powder metallurgy. In powder metallurgy, net or near-net shape articles are conventionally produced by hot or cold pressing loose metallic powders, often with high temperature steps where the temperatures are at or above the melting points of at least some of the constituents. The metallic powders initially exist in a loose or non-coherent state. Typically, the required amount of raw material powder is placed within a casting or mold that is hydraulically pressed under heat. The powder is sintered under the compression and heat, and net or near-net shaped articles are formed. Undesired grain growth is often experienced. The heat is not frictionally generated. Utilizing powder metallurgy techniques to form articles is advantageous, particularly for difficult to work materials, or where physical properties are desired that are not obtainable by the application of other metallurgical processes. Capital equipment requirements are sometimes very substantial, as are processing costs. It is difficult and expensive to achieve substantially full density with many metallurgical powder consolidation processes.
These and other difficulties of the prior art have been overcome according to the present invention.
The present invention contemplates a method wherein friction forming techniques are applied to form a dense article from a shaped plasticizable powder deposit. According to the present invention, a shaped deposit of the plasticizable powder is formed on a substrate.
The shaped deposit is treated, for example, by thermal or additive binders so as to render the deposit self-sustaining. The deposit is not fully dense. It is bound together so that it retains its shape on the substrate. Typically, the density of the deposit is less than approximately 75 percent of full density, although densities of from, for example, approximately 10 percent to 90 percent can be employed if desired. The preferred density of the shaped deposit is generally determined by what is necessary to allow the deposit to reliably hold its shape prior to and during frictional densification, and varies from one powder mixture to another. In general, the cost goes up as the density of the deposit increases, sometimes exponentially. There is usually no useful purpose served by increasing the density of the deposit beyond that that is required to maintain the shape of the deposit during processing.
Relative movement is established between the deposit and a friction tool according to conventional friction forming procedures. The friction tool is provided with a forming end at one end. The forming end is designed to contact the deposit and to work it into a denser article, preferably a substantially fully dense article by plasticizing, but not melting, the deposit. In general, the forming end moves in an orbital, oscillatory or circular motion, and the deposit is translated slowly past the forming end by movement of the deposit, the friction tool, or both. The friction tool is loaded so that the forming end bears against the deposit with sufficient force, when combined with the relative movement, to plasticize the deposit.
The forming end may be composed of a material that is consumed during the friction forming operation, or it may be composed of a material that is not significantly consumed during the operation. Where the deliberate consumption of the friction tool is contemplated, the material from which the tool is composed appears in the final article in significant proportions. The tool may thus be deliberately used to adjust the composition of the final article. Where the tool is not intended to contribute to the composition of the final article, at least the forming end is composed of a wear resistant material that does not contribute significantly to the final properties of the article. The nature of friction forming is such that for most materials at least a trace of the friction tool will appear in the final article. The system is adjusted so that these inevitable traces do not significantly alter the desired properties of the final article.
The forming end of the friction tool is urged into compressive moving contact with the deposit. The heat and pressure generated by this compressive moving contact is allowed to plasticize and densify the deposit into a dense article without reaching the melting point of the deposit. The degree of densification is controllable from, for example, approximately 10 percent to substantially 100 percent. Densification is conveniently determined by measuring either weight per volume or change in thickness. If, for example, the average thickness of a dense article is 0.1 inches, while the average thickness of the shaped deposit from which it was formed was 0.2 inches, the degree of densification is considered to be 50 percent.
The shaped deposit must be non-friable. That is, the deposit must not shatter before plasticization takes place. If the shaped deposit shatters when first touched by the forming end of the friction tool the material will scatter and some will likely be lost. The resulting densified article will not have a uniform or predictable thickness. The deposit should stay substantially intact at the site where it is deposited until plasticization is accomplished. The test for determining whether a shaped deposit is non-frangible is a very practical one. If substantially all of the shaped deposit stays at the site of deposition until plasticization occurs, the deposit is non-frangible. Non-frangible shaped deposits result in dense articles with substantially uniform thicknesses. That is, the thickness of the article is reliably determined by the thickness of the shaped deposit. The thickness of the article and its uniformity are controlled by the accurate application of the shaped deposit.
Frictional densification procedures according to the present invention form net or near-net shaped dense articles from powders without the expense and difficulties that are typically associated with the full densification of powdered metallurgical materials. The properties of such articles equal or exceed those typically achieved by conventional powdered metal densification procedures. In some instances the properties of such articles are not achievable by any other procedure.
The uniformity of particle distribution, and the fineness of the grains in densified articles made according to the present frictional densification invention are generally superior to those achievable by other procedures. The growth in grain size is minimal because the shaped deposit is plasticized at temperatures below the melting point of the plasticizable material. In a powdered system, which contains, for example, tungsten carbide and mild steel, the mild steel powder will be plasticized at temperatures below its melting point, and well below the temperature at which tungsten carbide exhibits significant grain growth. Substantially full (100 percent) densification of this system can be achieved without significant tungsten carbide grain growth. Intimate mixing of the powders is accomplished before they are formed into a shaped deposit. Appropriate mixing and depositing procedures are selected so that segregation or grading of the particles in the shaped deposit is substantially avoided. The resulting uniform shaped deposit is not significantly segregated or graded during the frictional densification procedure. The resulting dense articles are typically characterized by fine microstructures, substantially no dilution with the substrate, and a very strong bond with the substrate. This combination of characteristics is generally impossible to achieve with conventional higher temperature processing procedures.
The availability of computerized control systems permits an irregularly shaped deposit to be frictionally densified. A friction tool or probe can, for example, be guided over a surface with an irregular topography so as to apply pressure uniformly throughout.
The shaped deposit is supported by a substrate that is capable of resisting the force of the frictional densification procedure. After the shaped deposit has been densified, the resulting article may be left on the substrate as a coating, or removed to provide a stand-alone article. Bonding between the substrate and the article is generally excellent. The substrate can be removed, for example, by leaching, or, where possible, by mechanical operations.
The nature of the frictional densification process is such that it is typically applied to relatively thin layers of powdered materials. In this way the entire thickness of the layer is plasticized at one time. Substantial thickness is achieved by successively applying and densifying thin layers of powdered material over one another. The permissible thickness of the shaped deposits depends on the materials, however, shaped deposit thicknesses of less than approximately 0.2, and, preferably less than about 0.1 inches have been found to be satisfactory. The compositions of all of the successive layers need not be the same. The properties of an article may be graded by changing the compositions of the various shaped layers that are successively applied to build up the article. Also, varying the composition of the powders within a single layer may change the properties of a particular layer. For example, if part of a layer is laid down on a substrate, the composition is changed, and the rest of the layer is laid down, the frictional densification of the layer will fuse the parts of the layer into a single mass, the parts of which exhibit different characteristics. The composition may be changed, for example, as to particle size, particle shape, particle size distribution, particle surface preparation, chemical composition, or the like. The density of a single shaped deposit may be varied over the surface of a substrate, if desired, to vary the thickness of the resulting article. Also, the thickness of a single shaped deposit may be varied to vary the thickness of the resulting article.
The present invention is particularly applicable to the formation of dense articles that are difficult or impossible to produce using conventional metallurgical techniques. Various wear and corrosion resistant articles may be formed according to the present invention. Composite materials that include powdered diamond, borides, carbides, carbonaceous materials, or the like, as inclusions are easily produced utilizing frictional densification procedures of the present invention.
Referring particularly to the drawings for the purposes of illustration only and not limitation:
Referring particularly to the drawings, and particularly to
It is generally preferred that the friction tool 20, or at least the forming end 22 of the friction tool, be made of a substantially non-consumable material, that is, one not intended to break down and mix with the locally plasticized body of powder material. Some suitable substantially non-consumable materials, depending upon the nature of the powders in the shaped deposit, include, for example, tool steel, cemented carbide, diamond, and the like. Other materials may be used, as desired. Although a substantially non-consumable friction tool is generally preferred, a consumable friction tool may be used, if desired.
The substrate or support structure may be of any desired shape, for example flat, cylindrical, conical, elliptical, or the like. A flat or cylindrical substrate surface is preferred for use with manual control systems due to the simplicity and ease of use of such substrate surfaces, however, any desired configuration, compound, arcuate, angular, or the like may be used with appropriate control systems, if desired. For most applications, the shape of the substrate surface will determine the shape of the resultant dense article.
The powders from which the shaped deposit 12 is formed may be selected from metallic powders such as, for example, elemental aluminum (Al), nickel (Ni), iron (Fe), cobalt (Co), titanium (Ti), copper (Cu), niobium (Nb), tantalum (Ta), magnesium (Mg), Beryllium (Be), rhenium (Re), zinc (Zn), chromium (Cr), vanadium (V), gold (Au), silver (Ag), antimony (Sb), bismuth (Bi), lead (Pb), their respective alloys, and mixtures thereof. Whatever the composition of the powders, the powder particles should have a fine granular structure, that is, preferably an average particle size of from approximately 0.1 to 20, and preferably from approximately 0.5 to 2 microns.
Many different methods of forming the powder into a shaped deposit may be used, as may be desired, so long as control of the uniformity of the composition and its physical dimensions are achieved without exposing the shaped deposit to temperatures that would induce undesired grain growth. Generally, it is desirable to apply the powder in the form of a shaped layer 12 having a thickness of from approximately 0.020 to 0.050 inches, the thickness shown in
In a preferred embodiment referred to for purposes of illustration only, shown in
In the embodiment shown in
Referring to
Repetition of this Example 1 using shaped deposits having from about 50 to 70 weight percent aluminum and ranging in thickness from about 0.03 to 0.07 inches produces satisfactory results. Rotating the tool at from about 10,000 to 20,000 revolutions per minute, with compressive forces from about 10 to 100 pounds force, traversal speeds of from 0.01 to 0.1 inches per second, and mandrel rotation speeds to provide movement of the mandrel surface relative to the forming end of the friction tool of from about 0.5 to 20 inches per second produces satisfactory results.
Referring to
A powder comprising tungsten carbide and 12 weight percent cobalt was applied to a rotating cylindrical tool steel mandrel using a high velocity oxy-fuel torch. The powder had an average primary particle size of about 0.8 microns. The applied thickness of the shaped powder deposit was about 0.025 inches which at substantially full densification was about 0.017 inches. A 0.25-inch diameter cemented carbide friction tool was used, traversing the lathe at a rate of about 0.01 inches advanced for each rotation of the mandrel while the mandrel was spinning at a rate of about 360 revolutions per minute. About 10 pounds were applied to the friction tool. There was better than about a 99 percent densification. The resultant coherent article comprised a substantially fully dense nano-crystalline tungsten-carbide coating strongly bonded to the tool steel mandrel and having exceptional wear resistance characteristics.
What have been described are preferred embodiments in which modifications and changes may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the accompanying claims. As those skilled in the art realize the present invention can be adapted to produce a wide variety of different dense articles from an almost infinite combination of powder materials other than those disclosed in the specific examples provided herein.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/305,940, filed Jul. 16, 2001, and U.S. Provisional Application Ser. No. 60/333,863, filed Nov. 27, 2001.
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