These and other features and advantages of the present invention will become more readily appreciated when considered in connection with the following detailed description and appended drawings, wherein:
A sliding bearing constructed according to an exemplary embodiment of the invention is shown generally at 10 in
Details of the bearing layer 12 are further schematically illustrated in
In a preferred process, particles of tin 24 are coated with the protective nickel barrier 26. These particles are blended with particles of the matrix material 22 and are sintered and formed to the desired shape. For example, the materials may be sintered and then roll bonded to a metal strip (substrate 14) to yield one type of a sliding bearing or bushing. It is to be understood that the term sliding bearing is meant to incorporate full or half shell bearings, bushings, and bearing materials applied directly to any desired substrate to yield a bearing surface for supporting sliding movement of another object, such as a rotating shaft.
During sintering, the materials are heated and preferably above the melting temperature of the first material, but below that of the third material. But for the presence of the protective coating 26, the first material 24 would interact directly with the material of the matrix 22 under the sintering conditions and would dissolve partially or completely into the matrix material. The barrier layer 26 prevents this from happening by introducing a physical barrier between the first material particles 24 and the matrix material 22 during sintering. Consequently, at least some of the first material particles 24 survive the sintering process and are present in the final bearing material 12 as discrete secondary phases of the first material 24. Using the preferred materials as an example, the resultant copper-tin matrix material 22 would have secondary phases of free tin 24 contained within the matrix covered with a protective coating of nickel 26.
It is contemplated that at least some of the coated tin particles may have an imperfect barrier coating or one which gets disturbed during processing such that some metallurgical interaction may take place with the matrix material 22 and some of the coated particles 24. This may yield intermetallic regions 28 of tin-nickel-copper and/or tin-nickel in the matrix 22. These intermetallics would be considerably harder than the matrix material 22 and enhances the wear and seizure resistance of the bearing material 12, wherein the presence of the secondary soft phases 24 enhances conformability on the material 22.
As illustrated in
Obviously, many modifications and variations of the present invention are possible in light of the above teachings. It is, therefore, to be understood that within the scope of the appended claims, the invention may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described.