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A new powder encapsulation method and its implications on densification by hot isostatic pressingDowning, M. January 1993 (has links)
Hot isostatic pressing is now an accepted material processing technique for the consolidation of metal powders to near-net-shape components. This thesis examines the use of coatings as in-situ envelopes to overcome the problems associated with traditional containerisation of powder. The application of metallic coatings by physical vapour deposition, involving resistive and electron beam evaporation and ion plating, onto green powder metal compacts has been studied as a potential method for encapsulating powder metal products prior to hot isostatic pressing. The coating structures are discussed in terms of processing conditions and surface roughness influence. The most promising approach is a combined sinter-hot isostatic, pressing cycle, which utilises the formation of a transient liquid phase to defect-heal the coating during the sinter cycle prior to the application of pressure. The influence of particle size distribution on densification has also been studied. This included both monosized and bimodal powders. The results of this study has been incorporated into a modified Ashby model computer program and it is shown that the model results in a shift of the dominance of the mechanism fields and gives good correlation between the predicted and measured values of density.
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Sintering behaviour of cupronickel alloy powderBala, Sathish Rao January 1976 (has links)
Studies have been made of both the solid state and supersolidus sintering characteristics of spherical cupronickel powders. Observations were made of the structural changes and shrinkage rates in specimens sintered in vacuum and in hydrogen.
It was concluded that the early stage of solid state sintering (up to one hour at 1200°C) was dominated by Nabarro-Herring creep. Calculations of the stresses at necks during sintering were consistent with the proposed mechanism. No solute segregation to necks occurred during sintering, contrary to earlier observations by Kuczynski with other copper alloys.
When pre-sintered cupronickel powder ( 68 μm) aggregates were heated to a temperature above the equilibrium solidus, melting was nucleated first at high angle grain boundaries (necks) and particle surfaces (voids). Most melting was intragranular, nucleated at interdendritic sites of above-average copper content. Solid-liquid equilibrium was established in less than one minute at the supersolidus temperature. The dihedral angle in the system was less than or equal to zero.
Growth of solid grains during supersolidus sintering obeyed a parabolic rate law consistent with a model of growth due to phase boundary reaction-controlled solution and precipitation.
Shrinkage during supersolidus sintering proceeded in several distinct stages. Prior to attainment of equilibrium; i.e. within the first minute above the solidus (Stage 1), contraction could be attributed to a melting and melt accommodation sequence, plus flattening by the the local operation of solution and precipitation. Beyond this (Stages 2 and 3) all densification was attributed to solution-precipitation, including grain growth. In the final stage of shrinkage (Stage 3) the rate of contraction was controlled by the rate of escape of gas from closed pores.
Comparisons have been made between the supersolidus sintering of cupronickel and the liquid-phase sintering of iron-copper. The processes are seen to have little in common. / Applied Science, Faculty of / Materials Engineering, Department of / Graduate
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Investigation of alumina particulate characterization and microstructural evaluation /Bennett, Russell Bernard January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
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The growth, structure and properties of sinter-necks in mixed ferrous powder systemsRhodes, Nigel Anthony January 1998 (has links)
No description available.
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Investigation into the microstructure and tensile properties of unalloyed titanium and Ti-6Al-4V alloy produced by powder metallurgy, casting and layered manufacturingMasikane, Muziwenhlanhla Arnold January 2016 (has links)
A research report submitted to the Faculty of Engineering and the Built Environment, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Engineering, July 2015 / ABSTRACT
Solid titanium (Ti) and Ti-6Al-4V (wt.%) materials were fabricated from powders using spark plasma sintering (SPS), cold isostatic press (CIP) and sinter, layered (rapid) manufacturing, centrifugal and vacuum casing. ASTM Grade 4 Ti, Al and V, 60Al-40V (wt.%) and the pre-alloyed Ti-6Al-4V powders were used as starting materials. The solid Ti and Ti-6Al-4V materials produced by the SPS were compared to the CIP and sinter method on the basis of density, microstructure and chemistry. The materials produced by the CIP and sinter method were also compared to those produced by vacuum casting method on the basis of microstructure, oxygen pick-up, chemistry and room temperature tensile properties. Centrifugal casting was compared to the vacuum casting technique on the basis of microstructural homogeneity. Rapid manufacturing was compared to SPS and CIP and sinter on the basis of microstructural homogeneity, density and tensile properties. The tensile properties of all materials were also compared to their commercial counterparts to investigate the effect of interstitial oxygen. The technology resulting in materials with superior properties was finally identified as most promising for commercial production of Ti-based materials.
On the basis of densification, the SPS method appears superior compared to the CIP and sinter and rapid manufacturing method due to the benefit of pressure aided sintering, while the rapid manufacturing method is superior to the CIP and sinter method due to the use of a high power laser resulting in high densification rates. In cases where microstructural homogeneity is the key requirement, the CIP and sinter and rapid manufacturing methods appear superior compared to the SPS method due to longer isothermal holding time and higher sintering temperature and the use of pre-alloyed Ti-6Al-4V powder, respectively. On the basis of oxygen pick-up and additional contamination, the vacuum casting route is inferior due to the tendency of melt-crucible interaction, resulting in the dissociation of ZrO2 and subsequent pick-up of O and Zr. Based on the homogeneity of the microstructure, centrifugal casting is better than vacuum casting. The ductility of vacuum cast Ti was better than that of CIP and sintered Ti, possibly due to limited diffusion of oxygen from the crucible compared to oxygen absorbed from the controlled atmosphere during CIP and sinter. The vacuum casting of the Ti-6Al-4V alloy resulted in dissolution of oxygen and Zr due to melt-crucible interaction. Hence the ductility was worse compared to the alloy produced by CIP and sinter. The rapidly manufactured Ti-6Al-4V specimens exhibited superior ductility and
strength compared to all alloys produced by other methods due to the use of high purity starting powder. The tensile properties of these specimens were also comparable to standard requirements. The similarity of the tensile properties of wrought Ti-6Al-4V alloy reported in the literature was an indication of limited oxygen pick-up during rapid manufacturing. Therefore based on low oxygen pick-up, microstructural homogeneity, high density and superior tensile properties, the rapid manufacturing route appears to be the most promising approach for commercial processing of titanium based materials.
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Sintering of an Aluminium Alloy Under Pressurised ConditionsStephen Bonner Unknown Date (has links)
Increasing concern over the environmental impact of motor vehicles is driving the need for the development of lighter materials to reduce automobile weight and fuel consumption. Sintered aluminium alloys, with their high strength to weight ratios, have potential applications in the automotive industry, but conventional pressed-and-sintered materials have poor mechanical properties due to the presence of residual porosity in the sintered compact. Residual porosity can be eliminated by Hot Isostatic Pressing (HIPing) or combined sinter-HIPing, but these processes are expensive due to the high gas pressures involved, up to several hundred MPa, and also pose a significant safety hazard. There is a limited amount of evidence in the literature suggesting that applied gas pressures as low as a few MPa may be beneficial to the sintering of aluminium alloys, and it is this idea that the present work explores. Compacts of aluminium alloy 2712 (Al-3.8Cu-1Mg-0.7Si-0.1Sn) were prepared from elemental powders and sintered at 590ºC for up to 60 minutes in a horizontal tube furnace under constant flowing nitrogen or argon at pressures up to 600 kPa. Archimedes’ method was used to measure the density of sintered compacts, and the amount of open and closed porosity. Increasing the nitrogen pressure at the start of the isothermal holding stage to 160 kPa increased the sintering rate compared to standard atmospheric pressure sintering. Increasing the nitrogen pressure further, up to 600 kPa, had no additional benefit. The sintering rate was increased further by applying a 600 kPa nitrogen pressure during both heating and isothermal holding. The elevated nitrogen pressure had a negligible effect on the maximum sintered density achieved, and sintering in argon at elevated pressures had no measurable effect on the sintered density or sintering rate. It was shown that the elevated pressure aids in the closure of pores open to the specimen surface, contrary to HIPing and sinter-HIPing, where the pores must be isolated prior to the application of pressure. It was also shown that at 600 kPa nitrogen pressure, the sintered density was independent of the presence of tin in the alloy. The improvements to sintering seem to be related to the formation of aluminium nitride.
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Gamma prime precipitation modeling and strength responses in powder metallurgy superalloysMao, Jian, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--West Virginia University, 2002. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains xvi, 140 p. : ill. (some col.). Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 137-140).
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Feasibility study of infrared detection of defects in green-state and sintered PM compactsBenzerrouk, Souheil. January 2004 (has links)
Thesis (M.S.)--Worcester Polytechnic Institute. / Keywords: powder metallurgy; material evaluation; thermal imaging; NDE; IR radiation and detection; nondestructive testing; thermography; infrared imaging. Includes bibliographical references (p. 86-88).
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ON A NOVEL METHOD OF INCORPORATING AN INTERNAL STRUCTURE INTO GREEN POWDER METALLURGY COMPACTS USING DIE COMPACTIONBeck, Geoffrey 02 August 2012 (has links)
A novel method of producing die compacted powder metallurgy components with fully en-closed internal structures was developed. The physical characteristics of the compacts were evaluated by measuring bulk density, internal density gradients and compressive green strength. Additionally, a finite element simulation was developed to evaluate the compaction process of the internal structure compact.
The internal structure compact displayed the anticipated lower bulk densities due to the less dense internal structure than a conventional powder metallurgy compact, however; higher local densities were found within the internal structure compact at all compaction pressures. Compressive green strength characteristics showed unique results where the strength in-creased up to 300 MPa compaction pressure, however; at 400 MPa there was a distinct plat-eau in green strength. This phenomenon was attributed to an increase in differential shear stress around the internal structure with a minimal increase in density from 300 MPa to 400 MPa.
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A Finite Element Model for Ejection of Green Parts After PM CompactionHabib, FOUAD 02 October 2008 (has links)
The present study describes the development of an FE model of tooling during production of a transmission gear. Results of the simulation at the puck/die interface during ejection examine the behavior of friction. Machine component deflections under pressure and areas of wear/binding are also predicted. The tooling was developed and modeled in Abaqus, an FE pre- and post-processor. A metal PM (Powder Metallurgy) puck is simulated from the point at the end of compaction, and then at several positions during ejection. A test setup was designed and built. The apparatus will be used to create iron powder compacts, and experimental results will be used to evaluate future models. Experiments with the new design will enable future studies of friction at the puck/die interface. The current design is for a simple puck and an increase in part geometry complexity is proposed with preliminary design requirements. / Thesis (Master, Mechanical and Materials Engineering) -- Queen's University, 2008-10-02 13:53:50.789
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