Papers - Constitution and Microstructure of Copper-rich Silicon-copper Alloys (T. P. 1073 with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Cyril Stanley Smith
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The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
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21
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1909 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1940

Abstract

Somewhat over ten years ago the author described studies1'2 on the constitution of the copper-silicon system. The copper-rich portion of this diagram is shown in Fig. 1. The experimental points freely dotted about the diagram seemed to justify an otherwise unconvincing diagram and for several years the curious reverse bend in the alpha-phase boundary was accepted as substantially correct, even by later investigators3 of the system who introduced changes in the high-silicon phases. The binary diagram has been used as a base for several ternary systems5-9 without any suggested changes. Voce10 suspected the existence of another phase from his study of the cast alloys in the copper-manganese-silicon system, but evidently hesitated to extrapolate this to the binary diagram, particularly in view of the too ingenious explanation that was advanced1' to account for the pools of constituent clearly visible in castings; namely, that they were secondary alpha of twinned orientation deposited from beta. Von Schwarz,12 in 1932, called attention to the fact that this micro-constituent in copper-silicon alloy castings was anisotropic under polarized light and asserted that a new phase, not cubic, should be placed in the diagram .adjacent to alpha. Sautner,l3 on the basis of investigations with the polarizing microscope and with X-rays, introduced this phase into the diagram at about 6 per cent Si. The relevant part of his diagram is shown in Fig. 2. Sautner called the new phase beta, renaming the old beta phase zeta. To avoid confusion, in redrawing Fig. 2 the phases have been renamed in accordance with the terminology adopted in the present paper, in which the new phase is called kappa and the other phases retain the designation given them by Arrhenius and Westgren.4 The thermodynamic impossibility of Sautner's diagram and the paucity of experimental data left the exact location of the new phase field most uncertain, although his work proved beyond doubt that an additional noncubic phase exists. Because of the industrial importance
Citation

APA: Cyril Stanley Smith  (1940)  Papers - Constitution and Microstructure of Copper-rich Silicon-copper Alloys (T. P. 1073 with discussion)

MLA: Cyril Stanley Smith Papers - Constitution and Microstructure of Copper-rich Silicon-copper Alloys (T. P. 1073 with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1940.

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