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Lecture 7

This document discusses copper and its alloys. It covers the properties and commercial grades of pure copper, including oxygen-free high-conductivity copper and tough-pitch copper. It also discusses strengthening methods for copper alloys like work hardening and alloying. Several important copper alloys are described briefly, including brasses, bronzes, cupronickel, and nickel silver. Key properties and applications of these alloys are highlighted.

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Iftekhar Arefin
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
56 views18 pages

Lecture 7

This document discusses copper and its alloys. It covers the properties and commercial grades of pure copper, including oxygen-free high-conductivity copper and tough-pitch copper. It also discusses strengthening methods for copper alloys like work hardening and alloying. Several important copper alloys are described briefly, including brasses, bronzes, cupronickel, and nickel silver. Key properties and applications of these alloys are highlighted.

Uploaded by

Iftekhar Arefin
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

MME 291 : Lecture 7

Copper and its Alloys

Md. Rafiqul Islam


Department of MME
BUET, Dhaka
Properties of pure copper
Cu-Zn alloys system
Bronzes - properties and applications
Properties and applications of other
important copper alloys

Reference:
[Link] Avner. Introduction to Physical Metallurgy, 2nd Ed., Ch. 8.
2. R .[Link]. Materials for Engineers and Technicians.
Introduction
Ranked 3rd behind iron/steel and aluminium in terms of production
and consumption

Available in variety of product forms: 1 ) wrought products , 2)


castings 3) P/M methods etc.

Properties: High electrical and thermal conductivity ,good


machinability , strength ,ease of fabrication and non-magnetic etc
Commercial grades of copper
Oxygen-free high-conductivity (OFHC) copper
Electrically refined variety
99.97% purity; contains <10 ppm oxygen; highest electrical conductivity
No oxygen embrittlement effect; readily weldable
Used as conductor, electronic tubes and similar application as seal to glass
Tough-pitch’ copper
Fire refined variety
Contains 0.02 – 0.05% oxygen as Cu2O
Cu2O + H2 = 2Cu + H2O (gas welding)
roofing, gutters, automobile radiators and gaskets, kettles, pressure vessels
Deoxidised Copper
About 0.02% phosphorous is added to tough-pitch copper

Casting to remove oxygen globules.

A small increase in tensile strength.


Arsenical copper
About 0.3% arsenic added to improve corrosion

Used in condenser and heat exchanger applications


Free-cutting copper
About 0.6% tellurium added to obtain excellent machining properties

Used in bolts, studs, welding tips, electrical parts such as contact pins etc
Strengthening methods
Two principal methods used:
1. Work hardening
Single-phase copper alloys strengthened significantly by cold working

FCC copper has excellent ductility and a high strain-hardening coefficient

2. Alloying

a) Solid solution strengthening

A number of copper alloys contain large quantities of alloying elements,

yet remain as single phase, e.g., brass (<40% Zn), bronze (<10%Sn)

b)Precipitation hardening

A number of copper alloys display age-hardening response,

e.g., Be-Cu system.


Copper Alloys
1. Brasses – alloys of Cu and Zn
(a) Alpha brass – single phase alloys containing up to 36% Zn
i) Red brasses – 5 to 20% Zn
ii) Yellow brasses – 20 to 36% Zn
(b) Alpha plus beta brasses – double phase alloys containing 38 – 40% Zn
2. Bronzes – alloys of Cu and up to 10% elements other than Zn
3. Cupronickel – alloys of copper and nickel
4. Nickel silver – alloys of copper, nickel and zinc
Copper – Zinc System
Copper alloys containing <50% Zn are of
commercial importance.
Cored structure of a solid solution formed.
Peritectic reaction @ 905 ͦC : α + L = β
Amount of β is decreased as T decreases due
to limited solubility
For <46.6% Zn, α crystals precipitated out;
for >46.6% Zn,  crystals precipitated out.
Between 453 – 470 ̊ C, randomly-ordered –β
phase transforms into an ordered β’-phase
(shown as dotted lines).
Red Alpha Brass (5 to 20% Zn)
• Structure contains single phase a solid solution.
• Better corrosion resistant than yellow alpha brass and
• Not susceptible to season cracking or dezincification
Yellow Alpha Brass (20 to 36.8% Zn)
• Structure contains single phase a solid solution.
• Tough and ductile; one of the most malleable and ductile
metallurgical materials.
• Widely used for deep drawing and general presswork applications
Season cracking or Stress-corrosion cracking
Intergrannular corrosion (particularly in ammonia atmosphere)

Resulted due to the high residual stresses

left after severe cold working operation

Can be removed by stress-relief annealing Dezincification


Dezincification
Pitting corrosion resulted in contact with sea water or fresh water with high
O2 and CO2 content.

Dissolution of alloy caused deposition of porous non-adherent copper.

Small amount of tin or antimony minimize dezincification process.


 Alpha plus Beta Brasses (More than 36.8% Zn) .More than 50% Zn not useful

Muntz metal (α as dark and β’ as light)

After heat treatment (α as dark and β as light)


Tensile Properties
Properties of brass depends on the volume of the phases present.
Tensile strength and ductility increase in α-region due to solid solution
strengthening;
ductility reaches a maximum at 30% Zn.
Presence of – β’ phase causes a considerable drop in ductility but
rapidly increases the tensile strength up to a maximum when the alloy
contains all β’ -phase.
The strength falls rapidly at the appearance of the weak and brittle -
phase.
The shock resistance decreases while the hardness increases
Bronzes
Alloys of copper and tin, aluminium, silicon, or beryllium.
Copper – tin system

The final microstructure :


cored α solid solution+brittle
intermetallic compound δ (Cu31Sn8 )

 Up to 1 % (7% )Sn
Single phase and used as wrought alloy

From 10 – 18 % Sn
The structure contains (α + δ)
Cupronickel
Nickel alloys containing up to 30% nickel

Complete solid solubility i.e Cu-Ni alloys are single phase

They are not susceptible to heat treatment;

High resistance to corrosion fatigue and corrosive and erosive


actions in sea water
Nickel silver
These are ternary alloys of copper, nickel (5-30%) and zinc (5-40%).
Nickel silver containing over 60% Cu are single phase alloys
Easily cold-workable at room temperature
They make excellent base metals for plating with Cr, Ni or Ag

Nickel silver containing between 50-60% Cu are two-phase


Have reasonably high modulus of elasticity and,
like (α+β) brasses, are hot-workable

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