Papers - Beneficial Effects of Zirconium in Cast Nickel-silicon Bronzes (T.P. 1237)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
F. R. Hensel E. I. Larsen A. S. Doty
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
4
File Size:
337 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1941

Abstract

The alloy under discussion is a Pig. I shows results of heat-treating tests nickel-silicon bronze and is one of many on two typical nickel-silicon bronze castings age-hardening or precipitation-hardening of the type on which the observations were copper-base alloys. The hardening constituent is a nickel-silicon compound.l The quenching temperature necessary to produce hardening by a subsequent aging treatment is a function of the composition and extends from about 700°C. to 950°C.; the aging temperature range extends from 4000 to 600°C. The work carried out by the authors of this paper was confined to cast alloys having compositions within the ranges of: 1.5 to 3.00 per cent Ni; 0.4 to 0.75 per cent Sj: balance. comer. made. A quenching temperature of 750°C. produces almost as high a hardness on subsequent aging as do quenching temperatures of 850' and 900°C. Several foundries have spent years of active and intelligent effort in trying to control the casting and heat-treating variables of nickel-silicon bronzes and finally gave up the attempts because of the inconsistencies of results.2 This undesirable characteristic was not manifest in the ultimate hardness or conductivity but primarily in tensile strength and ductility, as shown in Table I. The variation in tensile properties was often much greater than that existing on the alloys
Citation

APA: F. R. Hensel E. I. Larsen A. S. Doty  (1941)  Papers - Beneficial Effects of Zirconium in Cast Nickel-silicon Bronzes (T.P. 1237)

MLA: F. R. Hensel E. I. Larsen A. S. Doty Papers - Beneficial Effects of Zirconium in Cast Nickel-silicon Bronzes (T.P. 1237). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1941.

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