Papers - Effect of Columbium on Some Annealing Characteristics of Copper and 80-20 Cupronickel (T.P. 1342, with discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Alan U. Seybolt
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
6
File Size:
404 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1942

Abstract

In examination of some cold-rolled copper and cupronickel that contained a little columbium, it was discovered that these alloys were unusually resistant to annealing. This effect was suficiently pronounced to warrant some investigation of the annealing characteristics of such compositions. Experimental Procedure The alloys were made from cathode copper, electrolytic nickel, and a special copper-columbium hardener alloy furnished by the Electro Metallurgical Corporation. This hardener alloy contained 10 per cent columbium, with tantalum, aluminum and iron as major impurities. The melting was carried out in a clay-graphite crucible in a high-frequency induction furnace! under a charcoal or electrode carbon cover. No deoxidizing additions were made. The 7-lb. copper heats were poured into a steel mold, hot-rolled to 1/4-in. thickness, and annealed for 56 hr. at 760°C.; the cupronickels were annealed I hr. at 815°C. The material was then cold-rolled to a 50 per cent reduction in thickness and annealing tests were carried out on this 1/8-in. hard-rolled strip. A little silver was added to copper-columbium alloys 402 and 403 to find out
Citation

APA: Alan U. Seybolt  (1942)  Papers - Effect of Columbium on Some Annealing Characteristics of Copper and 80-20 Cupronickel (T.P. 1342, with discussion)

MLA: Alan U. Seybolt Papers - Effect of Columbium on Some Annealing Characteristics of Copper and 80-20 Cupronickel (T.P. 1342, with discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1942.

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