1 / 42

Corrosion Resistance of P/M S.St.

Corrosion Resistance of P/M S.St. Richard R. Phillips, Engineered Pressed Materials Dennis Hammond Apex Advanced Technologies, LLC. Objective. Using 316L, 17-4ph, 409LCb & 434L Achieve higher densities Higher densities at lower sintering temperatures Obtain good corrosion resistance.

hedy
Download Presentation

Corrosion Resistance of P/M S.St.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Corrosion Resistance of P/M S.St. Richard R. Phillips, Engineered Pressed Materials Dennis Hammond Apex Advanced Technologies, LLC

  2. Objective • Using 316L, 17-4ph, 409LCb & 434L • Achieve higher densities • Higher densities at lower sintering temperatures • Obtain good corrosion resistance

  3. History • Historically difficult to get high density • Compressibility limiting factor • Work hardening during pressing • High surface oxides on powder • Limited oxide reduction in sintering and densification • Lower densities interferes with corrosion resistance

  4. Water atomized 316L 3200 ppm O2 5200X

  5. Gas atomized 316L 150 ppm O2 5200X

  6. Powder Preparation • 100 mesh standard powders of 316L, 17-4ph, 409LCb & 434L • A group with 0.75 % Lithium Stearate • A group with an Activation Technology • TRS bars pressed at 690 Mpa (50TSI)

  7. Activation Technology • Blend Additive/Lubricant Master Batch • Hydrostatic distribution of additives & lubricant during compaction • Particles are aligned in a best fit arrangement • Density gradients eliminated • Activation is initiated in the delubing stage and finalized in the early stage of sintering

  8. Density Gradient – Shape Retention EPM

  9. Lithium stearate Activation Technology

  10. Compressibilityg/cm3 at 690 Mpa (50TSI) Material Li Str. Activation • 316L 6.83 6.76 • 17-4ph 6.28 6.23 • 409LCb 6.63 6.58 • 434L 6.51 6.47

  11. Processing • TRS bars delubed at 400OC (750OF) in Air • Sintering in a H2 box furnace with a slow cool > 1 hr. • Sintering in a continuous vacuum furnace with a 2 bar fast N2 quench < 10 min. • Sintered at: 1120 (2050), 1177 (2150), 1232 (2250), 1288 (2350), 1343 (2450) & 1388OC (2530OF) • Time at temperature 45 min.

  12. Atmosphere Box Furnace

  13. Continuous Vacuum N2 quench

  14. Sintering size change and densification

  15. ASTM B895 Standard for Test Method 2 For alloy screening and process optimization

  16. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  17. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  18. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  19. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  20. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  21. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  22. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  23. 0%A, <1%B, 1-25%C, >25%D 744 hrs. immersion in 5% NaCl

  24. Conclusion BETTER CORROSION RESISTENCE • Higher density • Faster cooling rate • Activation Technology Higher density at a lower temperature ` Better response with continuous Vacuum Best corrosion resistance

More Related