1. Introduction
Al-Ti crystalline alloys are very attractive low-density materials with excellent properties at high temperatures [
1]. Titanium aluminides are used for engine and airframe applications, mostly in the aerospace industry. The development of Al-Ti alloys began about 1970; however the alloys have only been used in these applications since about 2000 [
2].
In general, the transformation of the crystalline phase of metallic materials to an amorphous phase can improve properties such as corrosion resistance [
3], hardness [
4] or mechanical strength [
5]. An ideal method to obtain the amorphous phase in significant quantities is mechanical alloying.
Mechanical alloying (MA) is a peculiar grinding process that employs a high-energy ball mill in order to produce a composite metal powder with a controlled microstructure. This happens through repeated welding and fracturing of a mixture of metallic (and non-metallic) powders by the action of the mill balls. To achieve the desired amorphous phase, the optimisation of a considerable number of variables is required. Some of the important parameters affecting the amorphisation of the powders, without being completely independent, are the type of mill, the container and the milling balls, the rotating speed (intensity), the milling time and temperature. Moreover, the ratio of the weight of the balls and weight of the powder (RBP), the milling atmosphere, the process control agent (PCA), etc. also affect the final microstructure.
The obtained amorphous structure is thermodynamically instable, and in order to preserve the amorphous character of the alloyed powder, it is very convenient to have a fast consolidation technique in relation to diffusive processes, such as the known as Field Assisted Sintering Techniques (FAST) [
6,
7]. These techniques take advantage of the Joule heat generated by the passage of an electric current through the powder mass. One of these techniques, Spark Plasma Sintering (SPS), has recently been applied to mechanically alloyed Al
86Ni
8Y
6 amorphous powders [
8,
9] reaching temperatures of up to 400 °C for a relatively long time in the order of minutes. However, other techniques such as Electrical Resistance Sintering (ERS) need a much shorter heating period.
The sintering of crystalline metal powders using electricity has been known for several decades. Bloxam [
10] was the first who reported and patented an electrical sintering method by applying a high intensity current through the metallic powder (electrical conductor); later, Weintraub and Rush [
11] combined electric current with pressure, and Taylor [
12] added the use of capacitors to eliminate the oxides covering the metal powders. These techniques are a type of hot pressing in which the powder itself generates heat due to the Joule effect, and are called “electrical resistance sintering under pressure”. However, these methods are still today of great interest [
13,
14], coexisting with the traditional powder metallurgy (PM) route of cold pressing and furnace sintering. The main advantages are the achievement of very high densities with moderate or low pressures (around 100 MPa), the need of extraordinarily short sintering times (about one second) and the option of sintering in air. Its main disadvantage arises from operational difficulties, and the fact of not achieving a homogeneous distribution of temperature and densification in the powder mass.
In this work, amorphous Al50Ti50 alloy is prepared by MA and the effect of different parameters of the ERS process on porosity, microstructure, formation of intermetallic compounds, kinetics of devitrification and hardening are analysed.
2. Materials and Methods
Pure elemental powders of aluminum AS61 (Eckart-Werke, Eckart, Germany, purity > 99.5%) and titanium Se-Jong 4 (Se-Jong Materials, Incheon, South Korea, purity > 99.5%) were mixed to give the desired compositions of Al
50Ti
50. The manufacturer’s chemical analysis for pure aluminum and pure titanium powders is given in
Table 1 and
Table 2, respectively.
The mixture of 72 g of Al
50Ti
50 powder was placed in a sealed cylindrical 304 stainless steel vial, together with 304 stainless steel balls and 1.5 wt. % of ethylene bis-stearamide (EBS) wax (C
38H
76N
2O
2), as shown in
Figure 1. The wax (PCA) function is to equilibrate the particles welding and rupture processes. Powders were alloyed up to 75 h in a high-energy attritor ball mill under a purified argon atmosphere to minimize contamination (oxygen and nitrogen from air). The RBP was fixed to 50:1, the rotor speed was 500 rpm, and the dry ball mill was carried out at room temperature. The MA experiment was interrupted at desired intervals and small amounts of the alloyed mix were taken out from the vial for analysis.
Size distribution and granulometric curves of the powders alloyed for different times were obtained by laser diffraction (Mastersizer 2000, Malvern Instruments, Malvern, UK). The structure and amorphisation progress of the ball milled powders were characterized by X-ray diffraction (XRD, D500, Siemens, Munich, Germany) with CuKα radiation, scanning electron microscopy (SEM, XL 30, Philips, Amsterdam, The Netherlands) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM, CM-200, Philips, Amsterdam, The Netherlands). The crystallisation process was followed by differential scanning calorimeter (DSC, Q100, TA Instruments, New Castle, DE, USA) under an argon gas flow. All the DSC results were obtained with heating rates of 40 °C/min up to a maximum temperature of 600 °C.
For the ERS process a resistance welding machine has been used (Serra Soldadura S.A., Barcelona, Spain), which provides the necessary electrical (high intensity and low voltage) and mechanical (load for compression) requirements. This adapted equipment produces the current with a one-phase transformer of 100 kVA, and the uniaxial load with a pneumatic cylinder reaching up to 14 kN. Moreover, the direct current intensity during the process is electronically controlled, and follow-up sensors record the outstanding parameters as the mobile punch displacement, the load and the effective voltage and current intensity.
Once milled, powders were processed to obtain a bulk material. The 12 mm in diameter ceramic die (
Figure 2) was confined by a metallic hoop. The outlets of the die were closed with water cooled electrodes of temperature resistant copper (98.9%Cu–1%Cr–0.1%Zr), and electro-erosion resistant wafers (75.3%W–24.6%Cu) in direct contact with the powder. The amorphous powders (2 g) were placed between the wafers for sintering. Due to their low thermal conductivity, the wafers dump the heat flow from the powder mass to the electrodes.
Powders were consolidated with a compaction pressure of 80 MPa and only one electric pulse for each specimen. Several current intensities (7.0, 7.5 and 8.0 kA) and current passing times (40 to 80 cycles, with 50 cycles = 1.0 s) were tested.
Hardness tests and light micrographs were carried out on diametrical planes of the cylindrical compacts mounted in Bakelite resin. Hardness measurements distribution in the diametrical plane is shown in
Figure 3. (Indentations were carried out in different positions due to the non-uniform porosity distribution, coming from the temperature gradient generated during consolidation). Indentations were carried out in the center (HV
c), in the outer layer near the surface (HV
o) and in the inner area (HV
i) of the compact. The hardness results were compared with the values of other investigations using different sintering techniques.
The structure and crystallisation progress of the compacts consolidated by ERS were characterized by XRD.
Author Contributions
Conceptualization, P.U., J.M.M. and F.G.C.; methodology, J.M.M. and F.G.C.; validation, P.U., F.T., E.S.C. and S.N.; writing—original draft, P.U.; writing—review & editing, P.U., F.T., E.S.C., S.N., J.M.M. and F.G.C.
Funding
This research was funded by Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (Spain) and Feder (EU) through the research projects DPI2015-69550-C2-1-P and DPI2015-69550-C2-2-P.
Acknowledgments
The authors also wish to thank the technicians J. Pinto, M. Madrid and M. Sánchez (University of Seville, Spain) for experimental assistance.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflict of interest.
References
- Appel, F.; Clemens, H.; Fischer, F.D. Modeling concepts for intermetallic titanium aluminides. Prog. Mater. Sci. 2016, 81, 55–124. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Appel, F.; Wagner, R. Intermetallics: Titanium aluminides. In Encyclopedia of Materials: Science and Technology, 2nd ed.; Elsevier Science & Technology: London, UK, 2001; pp. 4246–4264. [Google Scholar]
- Xia, Z.H.; Zhang, M.; Zhang, Y.; Zhao, Y.; Liaw, P.K.; Qiao, J.W. Effects of Ni-P amorphous films on mechanical and corrosion properties of Al0.3CoCrFeNi high-entropy alloys. Prog. Mater. Sci. 2019, 104, 250–329. [Google Scholar]
- Krasnowski, M.; Kulik, T. Nanocrystalline or amorphous matrix Al60Fe15Ti15(Co/Mg/Zr)5–5%B composites produced by consolidation of mechanically alloyed powders-lightweight materials with high hardness. Intermetallics 2012, 28, 120–127. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Qiao, J.C.; Wang, Q.; Pelletier, J.M.; Kato, H.; Casalini, R.; Crespo, D.; Pineda, E.; Yao, Y.; Yang, Y. Structural heterogeneities and mechanical behavior of amorphous alloys. Intermetallics 2018, 94, 65–72. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Olevsky, E.A.; Dudina, D.V. Field-Assisted Sintering, Science and Applications; Springer: Cham, Switzerland, 2018. [Google Scholar]
- Olevsky, E.A. Spark-Plasma Sintering and Related Field-Assisted Powder Consolidation Technologies; MDPI Books: Basel, Switzerland, 2017. [Google Scholar]
- Maurya, R.S.; Sahu, A.; Laha, T. Quantitative phase analysis in Al86Ni8Y6 bulk glassy alloy synthesized by consolidating mechanically alloyed amorphous powder via spark plasma sintering. Mater. Des. 2016, 93, 96–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Maurya, R.S.; Sahu, A.; Laha, T. Effect of consolidation pressure on phase evolution during sintering of mechanically alloyed Al86Ni8Y6 amorphous powders via spark plasma sintering. Mater. Sci. Eng. A 2016, 649, 48–56. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lux, J. For an Improved Manufacture of Electric Incandescent Lamp Filaments from Tungsten or Molybdenum or an Alloy Thereof. Great Britain Patent No. 27002, 13 December 1906. [Google Scholar]
- Weintraub, G.; Rush, H. Process and Apparatus for Sintering Refractory Materials. U.S. Patent No. 1071488A, 26 August 1913. [Google Scholar]
- Taylor, G.F. Apparatus for Making Hard Metal Compositions. U.S. Patent No. 1896854, 7 February 1933. [Google Scholar]
- Gallardo, J.M.; Agote, I.; Astacio, R.; Schubert, T.; Cintas, J.; Montes, J.M.; Torres, Y.; Cuevas, F.G. Hard metal production by ERS: Processing parameters role in final properties. Metals 2019, 9, 172. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Montes, J.M.; Gómez Cuevas, F.; Ternero, F.; Astacio, R.; Sánchez Caballero, E.; Cintas, J. Medium-frequency electrical resistance sintering of oxidized C.P. iron powder. Metals 2018, 8, 426. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cuevas, F.G.; Cintas, J.; Montes, J.M.; Gallardo, J.M. Al-Ti powder produced through mechanical alloying for different times. J. Mater. Sci. 2006, 41, 8339–8346. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cintas, J.; Rodríguez, J.A.; Gallardo, J.M.; Herrera, E.J. Simplification of the processing of milled aluminium powder and mechanical properties evaluation. Rev. Metal. 2001, 37, 370–375. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Caballero, E.S.; Cintas, J.; Cuevas, F.G.; Montes, J.M.; Herrera-García, M. Improvement in the mechanical behavior of mechanically alloyed aluminum using short-time NH3 flow. Metall. Mater. Trans. A 2016, 47, 6481–6486. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cintas, J.; Cuevas, F.G.; Montes, J.M.; Herrera, E.J. High-strength PM aluminium by milling in ammonia gas and sintering. Scr. Mater. 2005, 53, 1165–1170. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Ohno, T.; Kubota, M. Effect of mechanical milling atmosphere on hardness and constituent phase of pure titanium. J. Jpn. Inst. Light Met. 2010, 60, 647–653. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kao, Y.L.; Tu, G.C.; Huang, C.A.; Liu, T.T. A study on the hardness variation of α- and β-pure titanium with different grain sizes. Mater. Sci. Eng. 2005, 398, 93–98. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Poondla, N.; Srivatsan, T.S.; Patnaik, A.; Petraroli, M. A study of the microstructure and hardness of two titanium alloys: Commercially pure and Ti-6Al-4V. J. Alloy. Compd. 2009, 486, 162–167. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Cuevas, F.G.; Cintas, J.; Rodríguez, J.A.; Gallardo, J.M. Structure and Properties of consolidated attrition-milled Al-5%Ti PM specimens. Mater. Sci. Forum 2003, 426–432, 4307–4312. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Weisheit, A.; Mordike, B.L.; Smarsly, W.; Richter, K.H. Laser surface remelting and laser surface gas alloying of an intermetallic TiAl alloy. Lasers Eng. 2000, 10, 63–81. [Google Scholar]
- Sahu, P. Lattice imperfections in intermetallic Ti-Al alloys: An X-ray diffraction study of the microstructure by the Rietveld method. Intermetallics 2006, 14, 180–188. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Adams, A.G.; Rahaman, M.N.; Dutton, R.E. Microstructure of dense thin sheets of γ-TiAl fabricated by hot isostatic pressing of tape-cast monotapes. Mater. Sci. Eng. 2008, 477, 137–144. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Itsukaichi, T.; Masuyama, K.; Umenoto, M.; Okane, I. Mechanical alloying of Al-Ti powder mixtures and their subsequent consolidation. J. Mater. Res. 1993, 8, 1817–1828. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Takekazu, N.; Shigeoki, S.; Takashi, Y.; Masateru, N.; Masaru, Y. Preparation of functionally graded materials by pulse current pressure sintering of ball milled Al-50 at%Ti powder. Mater. Trans. JIM 2000, 41, 457–460. [Google Scholar]
- Samsonov, G.V.; Vinnitsky, I.M. Refractory Compounds, A Reference Book, 2nd ed.; Metallurgiya: Moscow, Russia, 1976; pp. 300–307. [Google Scholar]
Figure 1.
Scheme of the amorphisation procedure by mechanical alloying.
Figure 2.
Scheme of the die, electrodes and powders in the ERS experiments. The upper punch/electrode and upper wafer are the only parts with movement allowed.
Figure 3.
Positions of hardness indentations on a diametrical section of the cut specimen. Hardness in the other half is known because of the compact symmetry.
Figure 4.
Granulometric curves of Al50Ti50 mixture and MA powders for different milling times.
Figure 5.
SEM micrographs of (a) the Al and Ti powders mixture, and the Al50Ti50 alloy milled for (b) 5, (c) 12 and (d) 75 h.
Figure 6.
XRD patterns of (a) the Al and Ti powders mixture, and powders milled for (b) 1, (c) 5, (d) 12, (e) 25, (f) 50 and (g) 75 h.
Figure 7.
DSC of powders milled for (a) 12, (b) 25, (c) 50 and (d) 75 h.
Figure 8.
TEM micrographs and diffraction patterns of the Al50Ti50 alloy milled for (a) 5, (b) 25 and (c) 75 h, showing (a) crystalline and nanocrystalline phase, (b) nanocrystalline phase and (c) amorphous phase.
Figure 9.
Room temperature XRD patterns of (a) the Al50Ti50 alloy milled for 75 h, and heated to (b) 300, (c) 500, (d) 650 and (e) 850 °C, after cooling.
Figure 10.
Final porosity vs. sintering time (50 cycles = 1 s) of Al50Ti50 ERS compacts (from powder milled for 75 h) for different current intensities.
Figure 11.
Final porosity vs. sintering time (50 cycles = 1 s) of pure Ti ERS compacts (from unmilled powder) for 6 kA.
Figure 12.
Distribution of porosity in the periphery (a,c) and core (b,d) of the ERS 7/40 compact observed by optical microscopy (a,b) and SEM (c,d).
Figure 13.
High temperature XRD patterns of ERS (7/40) Al50Ti50 compact heated up to (a) 25, (b) 300, (c) 500 and (d) 650 °C.
Figure 14.
Hardness of aluminium, titanium and Al
50Ti
50 alloys according to bibliographic data [
15,
16,
17,
18,
19,
20,
21,
22,
23,
24,
25,
26,
27,
28].
Figure 15.
Hardness of ERS Al50Ti50 (and Ti for comparison) as-sintered and heat-treated compacts.
Table 1.
Chemical analysis of Al AS61 powder as indicated by Eckart-Werke.
Element | Al | Si | Fe | Zn | Cu | Ti | Others |
---|
wt. % | >99.5 | <0.250 | <0.350 | <0.050 | <0.020 | <0.020 | <0.500 |
Table 2.
Chemical analysis of Ti Se-Jong 4 powder as indicated by Se-Jong Materials.
Element | Ti | O | N | H | Fe | Si | Others |
---|
wt. % | >99.5 | <0.440 | <0.014 | <0.010 | <0.040 | <0.080 | <0.005 Mg <0.006 Mn |
© 2019 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).