Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1612147 Journal of Alloys and Compounds 2014 4 Pages PDF
Abstract
High-density W-20 wt.%Cu composites containing a Cu-network structure and exhibiting good thermal properties were fabricated by low-temperature hot-press sintering from high-purity copper-coated tungsten powders. The relative density of W-20 wt.%Cu composites sintered at 950 °C-100 MPa-2 h was 98.4%. The low-temperature densification of W-Cu composites occurs because the sintering mode of the coated particles involves only sintering of Cu to Cu, rather than both Cu to W and Cu to Cu, as required for conventional powder particles. The microstructure shows that a network of high-purity Cu extends throughout the composites, and that the W is distributed homogeneously; the interfaces between W and Cu show good contact. The composites have excellent thermal conductivity (239 W/(m K)) and a relatively low coefficient of thermal expansion (7.4 × 10−6/K), giving them some of the best properties reported to date for thermal-management materials. The excellent performance is mainly because of their structure, which arises from the characteristics of the high-purity copper-coated tungsten powders.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Materials Science Metals and Alloys
Authors
, , , , , ,