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Lecture 18 - Powder Metallurgy

Powder Metallurgy involves several basic steps: powder production, blending or mixing, compaction, sintering, and finishing. Atomization is the most common powder production method. Blending ensures a homogeneous mixture. Compaction uses pressing to form a "green" compact. Sintering transforms mechanical bonds into stronger metal bonds. Powder Metallurgy allows for a wide variety of alloys and properties, close control of dimensions, and high material utilization but is limited in size capability. It can be an economical process at high production volumes.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
229 views

Lecture 18 - Powder Metallurgy

Powder Metallurgy involves several basic steps: powder production, blending or mixing, compaction, sintering, and finishing. Atomization is the most common powder production method. Blending ensures a homogeneous mixture. Compaction uses pressing to form a "green" compact. Sintering transforms mechanical bonds into stronger metal bonds. Powder Metallurgy allows for a wide variety of alloys and properties, close control of dimensions, and high material utilization but is limited in size capability. It can be an economical process at high production volumes.

Uploaded by

Konark Patel
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© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Powder Metallurgy

Bill Pedersen ME 355

Example Parts

Basic Steps In Powder Metallurgy (P/M)

Powder Production Blending or Mixing Compaction Sintering Finishing

Powder Production

Atomization the most common Others

Chemical reduction of oxides Electrolytic deposition

Different shapes produced

Will affect compaction process significantly

Blending or Mixing

Can use master alloys, (most commonly) or elemental powders that are used to build up the alloys

Master alloys are with the normal alloy ingredients

Elemental or pre-alloyed metal powders are first mixed with lubricants or other alloy additions to produce a homogeneous mixture of ingredients The initial mixing may be done by either the metal powder producer or the P/M parts manufacturer When the particles are blended:

Desire to produce a homogenous blend Over-mixing will work-harden the particles and produce variability in the sintering process

Compaction

Usually gravity filled cavity at room temperature Pressed at 60-100 ksi Produces a Green compact

Size and shape of finished part (almost) Not as strong as finished part handling concern

Friction between particles is a major factor

Isostatic Pressing

Because of friction between particles Apply pressure uniformly from all directions (in theory) Wet bag (left) Dry bag (right)

Sintering

Parts are heated to ~80% of melting temperature Transforms compacted mechanical bonds to much stronger metal bonds Many parts are done at this stage. Some will require additional processing

Sintering ctd

Final part properties drastically affected Fully sintered is not always the goal

Ie. Self lubricated bushings

Dimensions of part are affected

Die Design for P/M

Thin walls and projections create fragile tooling. Holes in pressing direction can be round, square, Dshaped, keyed, splined or any straight-through shape. Draft is generally not required. Generous radii and fillets are desirable to extend tool life. Chamfers, rather the radii, are necessary on part edges to prevent burring. Flats are necessary on chamfers to eliminate featheredges on tools, which break easily.

Advantages of P/M

Virtually unlimited choice of alloys, composites, and associated properties

Refractory materials are popular by this process

Controlled porosity for self lubrication or filtration uses Can be very economical at large run sizes (100,000 parts) Long term reliability through close control of dimensions and physical properties Wide latitude of shape and design Very good material utilization

Disadvantages of P/M

Limited in size capability due to large forces Specialty machines Need to control the environment corrosion concern Will not typically produce part as strong as wrought product. (Can repress items to overcome that) Cost of die typical to that of forging, except that design can be more specialty Less well known process

Financial Considerations

Die design must withstand 100 ksi, requiring specialty designs Can be very automated

1500 parts per hour not uncommon for average size part 60,000 parts per hour achievable for small, low complexity parts in a rolling press

Typical size part for automation is 1 cube

Larger parts may require special machines (larger surface area, same pressure equals larger forces involved)

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