The present invention relates to compositions of hardenable and tarnish resistant sterling silver alloys to be used for jewelry manufacturing, among other purposes. The invention is directed to an alloy used for traditional sterling silver jewelry manufacturing scenarios. The alloy is soft and workable in its annealed condition, and can be hardened by heat treatment after forming or casting. The alloy of the present invention exhibits an outstanding resistance to tarnish. In particular, in one embodiment of the present invention, small amounts of palladium are introduced in a silver-copper alloy. In other embodiments, other metals, such as zinc, boron, as well as non-metals, such as silicon, are introduced in various quantities and combinations.
The present invention is further directed to a silver-based alloy composition which is soft and workable in an annealed condition, is hardenable through heat treatment, and is tarnish resistant. The preferred embodiment of the composition of the present invention includes a small percentage of palladium and a reduction from typical percentages of copper. In one embodiment the silver-based alloy includes no copper at all.
The classic sterling silver as we know it since medieval times comprises 92.5% silver and 7.5% copper by weight. It is known to be an easily tarnishable alloy. Its hardness in a soft annealed condition is known to be about 60 Vickers, and can be reversibly increased by age hardening typically up to about 110 Vickers. It is known that classic sterling silver age hardens due to a silver-copper miscibility gap. It is also known that silver-copper alloys show practically no age hardening when the concentration of copper is below about 5% by weight. It is not unusual for the modern sterling silver alloys to contain certain other base metals besides copper including tin, zinc, and indium. There are numerous sterling silver alloys that are commercially available and are described in literature. Some of these alloys are designed to improve casting characteristics such as form-filling and fluidity. Some of these alloys claim such features as higher as cast hardness, ability to be hardened by heat treatment (reversible hardenability) and high tarnish resistance.
U.S. Pat. Nos. 4,810,308 and 4,869,757 teach alloys with the small additions of tin and lithium that increase the aged hardness of sterling silver up to about 156 Vickers. The tarnish behavior of such alloys, however, is similar to that of classic sterling silver.
The resistance to tarnish of sterling silver alloys can be improved by lowering the copper content and adding other elements as shown in the examples below. The annealed hardness of these alloys lies within the range between 60-80 Vickers. Some of these alloys may be age hardened up to 135 Vickers.
Other relevant U.S. patents include:
An objective of the present invention is to improve both the tarnish resistance and reversible hardness of a silver-based alloy used for jewelry by introducing small amounts of palladium and zinc, at times, in combination with or in lieu of copper, and doing so at reasonable cost. In the preferred embodiment, the improved compositions consist of the following parts by weight: at least 92.5% silver, about 2% to 3% palladium, about 1% to 1.5% zinc, 0% to 0.1% silicon (as the de-oxidizer), 0% and 0.02% boron (to enhance the alloy fluidity), and the balance copper. Although palladium is introduced, the percentage of palladium remains low because the more palladium that is added, the most expensive the alloy becomes. In the present invention, no more than 5% of the alloy is palladium and preferably, less than 4% is palladium and even more preferably, 3% or less is palladium.
Table 1 lists different compositions, including traditional sterling silver (alloy 1) and example alloy compositions of the present invention (alloys 2-5), and including each composition's as cast Vickers hardness VHas cast, hardness after heat treatment VHht, and CIELab color coordinates L* (brightness), a* (red-green) and b* (blue-yellow), including traditional sterling silver (alloy 1) and for the alloys of the present invention 2-5, measured using conditions identified in well-known ASTM methods. Each of compositions 2-5 provides some or all of the desired characteristics. It is clear that the alloys of the invention show very similar to regular sterling color and exceptionally good reversible hardness between 160 and 180 Vickers (as opposed to 110 Vickers for regular sterling and 130 for existing hardenable silver alloys).
The alloys of the invention (alloys 2 through 5) each also show superior tarnish resistance. During a tarnish test, a sample of which is detailed as
With regard to the use of the composition in jewelry making, typically the composition of the present invention is annealed at 1350° F. and water quenched. The composition is age hardened at approximately 700° F. for at least one hour. As cast, the annealed hardness is from 85-115 Vickers and following age hardening, the hardness is from 160-180 Vickers.
Tarnish Testing
We have conducted comparative tarnish rest of three samples: Regular sterling A6001; LG422 sterling A6864 the tarnish behavior of which is comparable with many commercially available “de-ox” silvers; and A6165 new palladium containing sterling alloy #484. The results confirm superior tarnish resistance of new #484 alloy. This report provides the test details and presents the quantitative results.
Sample Preparation
1.5″ long and 0.020″ thick samples were cut out from the annealed flat stock items:
One side of each sample was manually polished and then carefully washed in acetone and alcohol to remove any polishing compound residues.
Tarnish Test Conditions
15 drops (about 0.75 ml) of ammonium sulfide (NH4)2S were combined with 250 ml of water. This solution was transferred into the 3 liter plastic beaker. The samples were placed polished sides up on the perforated plastic cover on top of the beaker about 9″ above the solution as shown in
After tarnish test samples are covered with tissue to reduce high reflectivity. Visually, regular sterling A6001 shows the most color change due to tarnish. Commercial “de-ox” sterling A6864 shows less tarnishing. New sterling alloy A6165 shows superior tarnish resistance.
Quantitative Tarnish Analysis
We have conducted three independent tarnish test sessions, each included new sample preparation and new solution preparation. The color change was measured using our Macbeth color spectrophotometer. There were some uncontrolled session-to-session variations related to instability of ammonium sulfide, ambient temperature and humidity. Even though such variations may have affected the absolute measurements, the comparative tarnish behavior of the samples stayed the same. This is illustrated in
Therefore, while various improved compositions have been shown and described, and several modifications thereof discussed, persons skilled in this art will readily appreciate that various additional changes and modifications may be made without departing from the spirit of the invention, as defined and differentiated by the following claims.
The present application claims priority to U.S. Provisional Pat. Application No. 61/722,824, filed on Nov. 6, 2012, and which is incorporated herein by reference.
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