Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1576118 Materials Science and Engineering: A 2013 8 Pages PDF
Abstract
This paper presents the results of studies of the structure and properties of coatings produced by cladding 10 mm thick titanium plates with titanium-tantalum powder mixtures using an electron beam extracted into air. A mixture of CaF2 and LiF salts was used as a flux that protected the heated material from the air atmosphere. The electron beam power was 33.5 kW, the velocity of the sample relative to the beam 10 mm/s, and the beam scanning frequency 50 Hz. High-performance titanium-tantalum layers 2-2.5 mm thick with a tantalum content of 3.9-22.4 wt% were obtained. The surface layers have a dispersed α(α′)+β structure. The tensile strength of the alloy containing 3.9% tantalum is 620 MPa. Increasing the Ta content to 22.4% increases the tensile strength to 735 MPa. For the coating material containing 22.4 wt% Ta, the rate of corrosion in a 68% solution of boiling nitric acid was 190 times lower than that for unclad titanium. The conditions of formation of the layer structure by high-velocity electron-beam cladding of powder materials are significantly different from equilibrium. For this reason, the resulting materials are characterized by a number of features, including a high degree of dispersion of the structural components and inhomogeneous chemical composition.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Materials Science (General)
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