Papers - Properties of the Platinum Metals, II-Tensile Strengths of Platinum, Palladium and Several of Their Commercial Alloys at Elevated Temperatures, with a Few Notes on High-temperature Corrosion Resistance of Platinum (With Discussion)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
E. M. Wise J. T. Eash
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
13
File Size:
439 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1938

Abstract

Many of the platinum metal alloys are hot-forged in the early stages of reduction from ingot and substantial quantities of platinum alloys are commercially employed at very high temperatures in ammonia oxidation units, orifices for forming glass rods and fibers and as cathodes in long-life thermionic amplifiers. They are used also for electrical heating resistors, safety blowout disks, thermocouples and crucibles. The tensile properties at elevated temperatures are important in many of these situations but data on the subject are limited. Creep data also are important, but will not be covered at this time. Scope and Conclusions Tensile tests were carried out at room temperature and elevated temperatures up to 1100" C. on previously well annealed samples of platinum. palladium and several of their important alloys with compositions shown in Table 1. The results are presented graphically in Figs. 1 to 4. The tensile strengths of platinum and the platinum-base alloys (with the exception of the 10 per cent rhodium-platinum alloy) at 1100" C. are from 16.6 to 18.8 per cent of the strengths of the same alloys (well annealed) at room temperature. The strength ratio of the 10 per cent rhodium-platinum alloy is 22.3 per cent, which is appreciably higher than that of the other materials tested. The tensile strengths of palladium and the palladium alloy at 1100" C. are from 10 to 11.2 per cent of the room-temperature values. The elongations of platinum and its alloys tend to increase at temperatures above 600" to 800" C., while the two samples of pure palladium show a maximum at 600" C.
Citation

APA: E. M. Wise J. T. Eash  (1938)  Papers - Properties of the Platinum Metals, II-Tensile Strengths of Platinum, Palladium and Several of Their Commercial Alloys at Elevated Temperatures, with a Few Notes on High-temperature Corrosion Resistance of Platinum (With Discussion)

MLA: E. M. Wise J. T. Eash Papers - Properties of the Platinum Metals, II-Tensile Strengths of Platinum, Palladium and Several of Their Commercial Alloys at Elevated Temperatures, with a Few Notes on High-temperature Corrosion Resistance of Platinum (With Discussion). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1938.

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