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US20060115374A1 - Titanium-based alloy - Google Patents

Titanium-based alloy Download PDF

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Publication number
US20060115374A1
US20060115374A1 US10/535,791 US53579105A US2006115374A1 US 20060115374 A1 US20060115374 A1 US 20060115374A1 US 53579105 A US53579105 A US 53579105A US 2006115374 A1 US2006115374 A1 US 2006115374A1
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United States
Prior art keywords
alloy
mass
titanium
strength
iron
Prior art date
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Abandoned
Application number
US10/535,791
Inventor
Vladisal Tetyukhin
Jury Zakharov
Igor Levin
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VSMPO Avisma Corp PSC
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Individual
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Filing date
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Assigned to VSMPO-AVISMA CORPORATION reassignment VSMPO-AVISMA CORPORATION ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: LEVIN, IGOR VASILIEVICH, TETYUKHIN, VLADISLAV VALENTINOVICH, ZAKHAROV, JURY IVANOVICH
Publication of US20060115374A1 publication Critical patent/US20060115374A1/en
Abandoned legal-status Critical Current

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Classifications

    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C14/00Alloys based on titanium

Definitions

  • the invention relates to the metallurgical one, and more particularly to creation of the modern titanium alloys used for making high-strength and high-tech items, including the large-sized ones, i.e. alloys having the high generecity.
  • titanium alloys One of the known titanium alloys is the alloy containing, in % by weight: aluminum 2-6, molybdenum 6-9, vanadium 1-3, chromium 0.5-2.0, iron 0-1.5, titanium—balance (Inventor's Certificate USSR No. 180351, Class C22C 14/00, published 1966).
  • This alloy was proposed for making die-forgings and forgings for the highly loaded structural parts.
  • the significant drawback is its tendency to forming the high density inclusions when melting ingots due to the high content of the refractory element molybdenum (>6%).
  • the presence of such inclusions in the high-loaded parts leads to destruction of such parts when being in service.
  • the other known titanium alloy containing % by weight: 4.0-6.3 Al; 4.0-5.0 V; 1.5-2.5 Mo; 0.8-1.4 Cr; 0.4-0.8 Fe; 0.01-0.08 Zr; 0.01-0.25 C; 0.03-0.25 O; balance—titanium (Inventor's Certificate USSR No. 555161, Class C22C 14/00, published 1977).
  • This alloy has the high strength properties, fine ductility, not disposed to forming the high density inclusions.
  • the drawback of this alloy is the impossibility of cold die-forging, caused by insufficient level of the index of the process plasticity as age, such as the degree of cold upsetting (less than 60%).
  • the closest to the claimed invention from the technical point is the alloy with the base of titanium, containing % by weight: 2.2-3.8 Al; 4.5-5.9 V; 4.5-5.9 Mo; 2.0-3.6 Cr; 0.2-0.8 Fe; 0.01-0.08 Zr; 0.01-0.25 C; 0.03-0.25 O; Ti—balance (RF Patent No. 2150528, Class C22C 14/00, published 2000)—prototype.
  • Alloy has the high level of plasticity as quenched, in this case they achieve the degree of cold upsetting >75%.
  • the known alloy has the insufficiently high level of the working temperatures, this limits the scope of its application as a structural material for making parts, used at increased temperatures.
  • This invention aims at creation of the titanium alloy with the increased heat-resistance, which ensures the possibility of making the heavy large-sized parts with the high level of the strength and plastic properties, used at increased temperatures.
  • the technical result is achieved due to the fact that in the alloy with the base of titanium, containing aluminum, vanadium, molibdenum, chromium, iron, zirconium, carbon, oxygen, according to the invention, the components are taken in the following ratio, weight %: Aluminum 2.2-3.8 Vanadium 4.5-5.9 Molibdenum 4.5-5.9 Chromium 2.0-3.6 Zirconium 0.1-0.4 Iron 0.01-0.18 Carbon 0.01-0.25 Oxygen 0.03-0.25 Titanium balance
  • the combination of high strength and plasticity of the proposed alloy is achieved as a result of the task-oriented choice and experimental evaluation of the alloying ranges.
  • Content of the ⁇ -stabilizing elements (aluminum, oxygen, carbon) and ⁇ -stabilizers (molibdenum, vanadium, chromium, iron) is chosen as required and sufficient for achievement of the set target.
  • the proposed alloy ensures the possibility to effectively regulate the strength level of the alloy as aged within the wide ranges.
  • Balancing aluminum and chromium content in the claimed alloy ensures high alloy ability for cold die forging (fine rolling to bar) and possibility of alloy strengthening by the thermal techniques obtaining the high level of the strength and plastic properties.
  • the content of V and Mo is set as >4.5%.
  • V and Mo content is accepted 5.9% max due to the hazard of significant growth of segregation non-uniformity and occurrence of defects when using the hard master alloys.
  • Amount of zirconium in the alloy from 0.1 to 0.4% ensures increase of the tensile strength without lowering of the metal processibility during hot (not increases the flow stress) and cold (not decreases the plasticity resource) deformation. In this case stabilizing the ⁇ -phase, zirconium increases creep resistance and high-temperature strength.
  • Ranges of alloying with zirconium and iron are selected on the base of experimental evaluation of the alloy mechanical properties in the proposed composition range. Content of zirconium from 0.1 to 0.4% and iron to 0.18% ensures the increase of the ultimate strength of the alloy in the as quenched and aged condition.
  • the proposed combination of the components of the alloy and their % ratio in complex ensures the possibility of the alloy deformation in the greater temperature range and obtaining parts by cold die forging.
  • Test results show that the declared items (bars with dia 50 mm) from titanium-base alloy have the high processing plasticity level as quenched, in this case they achieve the degree of cold upsetting >75% in combination with high strength obtained as a result of the subsequent ageing ( ⁇ B >1500 Mpa).
  • the claimed alloy has the higher range of the working temperatures (10-15° C. higher than the alloy-prototype has), this gives the possibility to use it not only when making the bolt heads through cold heading, in cold threading, in production of coil springs, and for making large semis up to 60 mm in section, with the high level of strength and plastic properties, used at increased temperatures.

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Heat Treatment Of Steel (AREA)
  • Forging (AREA)
  • Manufacture And Refinement Of Metals (AREA)
  • Materials For Medical Uses (AREA)
  • Springs (AREA)

Abstract

The inventive titanium-based alloy contains 2.2-3.8 mass % aluminium, 4.5-5.9 mass % vanadium, 4.4-5.9 mass % molybdenum, 2.0-3.6 mass % chromium, 0.1-0.4 mass % zirconium, 0.01-0.18 mass % iron and 0.03-0.25 mass % oxygen, the rest being titanium. Said alloy exhibits a high processing plasticity in hardened condition thereof associated with a high strength. The alloy has a high temperature range, thereby making it possible to use it not only for screw heads and helical springs but also for producing large-sized semi-products whose cross section ranges up to 60 mm and which are used in high temperature conditions.

Description

    FIELD OF THE INVENTION
  • The invention relates to the metallurgical one, and more particularly to creation of the modern titanium alloys used for making high-strength and high-tech items, including the large-sized ones, i.e. alloys having the high generecity.
  • PRIOR STATE OF ART
  • One of the known titanium alloys is the alloy containing, in % by weight: aluminum 2-6, molybdenum 6-9, vanadium 1-3, chromium 0.5-2.0, iron 0-1.5, titanium—balance (Inventor's Certificate USSR No. 180351, Class C22C 14/00, published 1966).
  • This alloy was proposed for making die-forgings and forgings for the highly loaded structural parts. The significant drawback is its tendency to forming the high density inclusions when melting ingots due to the high content of the refractory element molybdenum (>6%). The presence of such inclusions in the high-loaded parts leads to destruction of such parts when being in service.
  • The other known titanium alloy, containing % by weight: 4.0-6.3 Al; 4.0-5.0 V; 1.5-2.5 Mo; 0.8-1.4 Cr; 0.4-0.8 Fe; 0.01-0.08 Zr; 0.01-0.25 C; 0.03-0.25 O; balance—titanium (Inventor's Certificate USSR No. 555161, Class C22C 14/00, published 1977).
  • This alloy has the high strength properties, fine ductility, not disposed to forming the high density inclusions.
  • The drawback of this alloy is the impossibility of cold die-forging, caused by insufficient level of the index of the process plasticity as age, such as the degree of cold upsetting (less than 60%).
  • The closest to the claimed invention from the technical point is the alloy with the base of titanium, containing % by weight: 2.2-3.8 Al; 4.5-5.9 V; 4.5-5.9 Mo; 2.0-3.6 Cr; 0.2-0.8 Fe; 0.01-0.08 Zr; 0.01-0.25 C; 0.03-0.25 O; Ti—balance (RF Patent No. 2150528, Class C22C 14/00, published 2000)—prototype.
  • Alloy has the high level of plasticity as quenched, in this case they achieve the degree of cold upsetting >75%.
  • However, the known alloy has the insufficiently high level of the working temperatures, this limits the scope of its application as a structural material for making parts, used at increased temperatures.
  • DISCLOSURE OF THE INVENTION
  • This invention aims at creation of the titanium alloy with the increased heat-resistance, which ensures the possibility of making the heavy large-sized parts with the high level of the strength and plastic properties, used at increased temperatures.
  • The technical result achieved when patent pending is in regulating the optimum combination of α- and β-stabilizing alloying elements in the finished semiproduct.
  • The technical result is achieved due to the fact that in the alloy with the base of titanium, containing aluminum, vanadium, molibdenum, chromium, iron, zirconium, carbon, oxygen, according to the invention, the components are taken in the following ratio, weight %:
    Aluminum 2.2-3.8
    Vanadium 4.5-5.9
    Molibdenum 4.5-5.9
    Chromium 2.0-3.6
    Zirconium 0.1-0.4
    Iron 0.01-0.18
    Carbon 0.01-0.25
    Oxygen 0.03-0.25
    Titanium balance
  • The combination of high strength and plasticity of the proposed alloy is achieved as a result of the task-oriented choice and experimental evaluation of the alloying ranges. Content of the α-stabilizing elements (aluminum, oxygen, carbon) and β-stabilizers (molibdenum, vanadium, chromium, iron) is chosen as required and sufficient for achievement of the set target. Besides, the proposed alloy ensures the possibility to effectively regulate the strength level of the alloy as aged within the wide ranges.
  • Balancing aluminum and chromium content in the claimed alloy ensures high alloy ability for cold die forging (fine rolling to bar) and possibility of alloy strengthening by the thermal techniques obtaining the high level of the strength and plastic properties.
  • With aluminum and chromium content below the minimum values the alloy strength is lowered after thermostrengthening (σB<1400 MPa), i.e. the problem put is not achieved.
  • When aluminum and chromium content exceeds the declared limit the alloy plasticity lowers (δ<8%, ψ<40%) with the high strength level (σB >1400 MPa).
  • To ensure the required strength (>1150 MPa) as quenched and aged, as well as to perform quenching in the air, not in water, the content of V and Mo is set as >4.5%.
  • V and Mo content is accepted 5.9% max due to the hazard of significant growth of segregation non-uniformity and occurrence of defects when using the hard master alloys.
  • As the increase of V and Mo content, as already said, is not recommended to be above 5.9%, then for the subsequent (above 1150 MPa) increase of the strength properties (as quenched and aged) they introduce the moderate additions of Cr (2.0-3.6%) and Fe (to 0.18%) within the limits, which do not bring to the occurrence of the visible dentritic or zonal segregation.
  • In the proposed alloy, as compared to the prototype, the iron content with the value of the distribution number is decreased. ( K = Csolid phase % Cliquid phase % )
    is significantly below one, and this predetermines the iron tendency to segregation, which is aggravated with the increase of the ingot and item size.
  • Amount of zirconium in the alloy from 0.1 to 0.4% ensures increase of the tensile strength without lowering of the metal processibility during hot (not increases the flow stress) and cold (not decreases the plasticity resource) deformation. In this case stabilizing the α-phase, zirconium increases creep resistance and high-temperature strength.
  • Introduction of zirconium exceeding 0.4% significantly lowers the alloy processing plasticity during cold strain.
  • Ranges of alloying with zirconium and iron are selected on the base of experimental evaluation of the alloy mechanical properties in the proposed composition range. Content of zirconium from 0.1 to 0.4% and iron to 0.18% ensures the increase of the ultimate strength of the alloy in the as quenched and aged condition.
  • The proposed combination of the components of the alloy and their % ratio in complex ensures the possibility of the alloy deformation in the greater temperature range and obtaining parts by cold die forging.
  • EMBODIMENTS OF THE INVENTION
  • For the evaluation of the alloy properties the double-melt ingots were vaccum arc remelting melted with the following alloy compositions (Table 1).
    TABLE 1
    Alloy chemistry, % by weight
    Alloy Al V Mo Cr Fe Zr C O2 Ti
    1 2.2 4.5 4.5 2.0 0.1 0.1 0.01 0.03 balance
    2 3.0 5.2 4.8 2.8 0.15 0.2 0.2 0.2 balance
    3 3.8 5.9 5.9 3.6 0.18 0.4 0.25 0.25 balance
  • The bars were made of each ingot with the diameter of 50 mm. The bars were heat-treated to obtain the high strength. The mechanical properties of bars at room temperature are show in Table 2.
    TABLE 2
    Rate of Mechanical properties
    deformation Resistance
    when cold Ultimate Yield Elonga- Reduction to shear
    upsetting Strength Strength tion of Area τcp.
    Alloy ε, % σB(MPa) σ0,2(MPa) δ(%) ψ(%) (MPa)
    1 77 1425 1370 11 48 915
    2 75 1470 1385 10 43 945
    3 72 1515 1455 9 41 975
    Required level 70 1400 1300 8 40 900
    of properties
  • Test results show that the declared items (bars with dia 50 mm) from titanium-base alloy have the high processing plasticity level as quenched, in this case they achieve the degree of cold upsetting >75% in combination with high strength obtained as a result of the subsequent ageing (σB>1500 Mpa).
  • COMMERCIAL PRACTICABILITY
  • The claimed alloy has the higher range of the working temperatures (10-15° C. higher than the alloy-prototype has), this gives the possibility to use it not only when making the bolt heads through cold heading, in cold threading, in production of coil springs, and for making large semis up to 60 mm in section, with the high level of strength and plastic properties, used at increased temperatures.

Claims (1)

1. Alloy with the base of titanium, containing aluminum, vanadium, molibdenum, chromium, iron, zirconium, carbon, oxygen, differing in the fact that the alloy components are taken in the following ratio of the % by weight.
Aluminum 2.2-3.8 Vanadium 4.5-5.9 Molibdenum 4.5-5.9 Chromium 2.0-3.6 Zirconium 0.1-0.4 Iron 0.01-0.18 Carbon 0.01-0.25 Oxygen 0.03-0.25 Titanium balance
US10/535,791 2002-11-25 2003-08-21 Titanium-based alloy Abandoned US20060115374A1 (en)

Applications Claiming Priority (3)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
RU2002131488/02A RU2228966C1 (en) 2002-11-25 2002-11-25 Titanium-based alloy
RU2002131 2002-11-25
PCT/RU2003/000378 WO2004048627A1 (en) 2002-11-25 2003-08-21 Titanium-based alloy

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US (1) US20060115374A1 (en)
EP (1) EP1577409B1 (en)
AU (1) AU2003261684A1 (en)
DE (1) DE60317708T2 (en)
DK (1) DK1577409T3 (en)
ES (1) ES2293095T3 (en)
HK (1) HK1079826B (en)
RU (1) RU2228966C1 (en)
WO (1) WO2004048627A1 (en)

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* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
RU2346998C2 (en) * 2007-01-17 2009-02-20 Федеральное государственное унитарное предприятие "Всероссийский научно-исследовательский институт авиационных материалов" (ФГУП "ВИАМ") Alloy on titanium base and item made out of this alloy
RU2391426C1 (en) * 2009-01-11 2010-06-10 Федеральное Государственное Унитарное Предприятие "Центральный Научно-Исследовательский Институт Конструкционных Материалов "Прометей" (Фгуп "Цнии Км "Прометей") Titanium alloy for power fastening elements
BR112018071290A2 (en) * 2016-04-25 2019-02-05 Arconic Inc bcc materials from titanium, aluminum, vanadium and iron, and products made from these

Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6632396B1 (en) * 1999-04-20 2003-10-14 Vladislav Valentinovich Tetjukhin Titanium-based alloy

Family Cites Families (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
SU555161A1 (en) * 1975-02-14 1977-04-25 Ордена Ленина Предприятие П/Я Р-6209 Titanium based alloy
US4943412A (en) * 1989-05-01 1990-07-24 Timet High strength alpha-beta titanium-base alloy
US5980655A (en) * 1997-04-10 1999-11-09 Oremet-Wah Chang Titanium-aluminum-vanadium alloys and products made therefrom
RU2169204C1 (en) * 2000-07-19 2001-06-20 ОАО Верхнесалдинское металлургическое производственное объединение Titanium-based alloy and method of thermal treatment of large-size semiproducts from said alloy
RU2192493C2 (en) * 2000-12-19 2002-11-10 Государственное предприятие Всероссийский научно-исследовательский институт авиационных материалов Titanium-based alloy and article made from such alloy

Patent Citations (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6632396B1 (en) * 1999-04-20 2003-10-14 Vladislav Valentinovich Tetjukhin Titanium-based alloy

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EP1577409B1 (en) 2007-11-21
ES2293095T3 (en) 2008-03-16
HK1079826A1 (en) 2006-04-13
RU2228966C1 (en) 2004-05-20
DK1577409T3 (en) 2008-02-18
EP1577409A4 (en) 2006-08-16
DE60317708D1 (en) 2008-01-03
EP1577409A1 (en) 2005-09-21
HK1079826B (en) 2008-05-02
DE60317708T2 (en) 2008-10-30
AU2003261684A1 (en) 2004-06-18
WO2004048627A1 (en) 2004-06-10

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Legal Events

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AS Assignment

Owner name: VSMPO-AVISMA CORPORATION, RUSSIAN FEDERATION

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:TETYUKHIN, VLADISLAV VALENTINOVICH;ZAKHAROV, JURY IVANOVICH;LEVIN, IGOR VASILIEVICH;REEL/FRAME:016699/0242

Effective date: 20050524

STCB Information on status: application discontinuation

Free format text: ABANDONED -- FAILURE TO RESPOND TO AN OFFICE ACTION

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