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A Copper-Nickel-Silicon-Chromium Alloy for Mold Tooling(2)

Posted by: Mu Ju 2019-05-26 Comments Off on A Copper-Nickel-Silicon-Chromium Alloy for Mold Tooling(2)

Microstructure
An SEM micrograph (backscattered electron image) of a polished CNS-V sample is shown in Figure 3. The large 10 micron regions are Ni2Si particles, while the smaller dark regions are Cr2Si3 particles. An optical micrograph of that material at 260X is shown in Figure 4. Another optical micrograph at 50X, shown in Figure 5, shows much larger (100 micron) Ni2Si particles that are elongated in the rolling direction of the plate. In large sections, the best microstructural quality that one can expect from this alloy is something consistently like Figure 4. In many cases, the material will contain large precipitates which can adversely affect fatigue strength, toughness and surface finish.

Figure 3: 500X backscattered electron image of CNS-V. Figure 4: 260X optical image of CNS-V. Figure 5: 50X optical image of CNS-V with large silicide particles.

Results of Conductivity Testing
The electrical conductivity is dependent on the heat treatment of the material. The alloy attains its minimum conductivity (and strength) after solution annealing, the initial heat treatment after hotworking. A conductivity near 18.0 MS/m (31% IACS) and maximum strength is achieved after aging at intermediate temperature. Figure 6 shows a relationship between electrical conductivity and tensile strength for a single heat of material that has undergone several different overaging heat treatments beyond the peak strength.

The thermal conductivity of three samples was measured. Two of the samples were from different orientations of the same plate: one normal and one perpendicular to the surface. This plate has a room temperature electrical conductivity of 18.0 MS/m (31% IACS) and a nominal hardness of 28 HRC. The other sample has a room temperature electrical conductivity of 19.7 MS/m (34% IACS) and a hardness of 26 HRC.

Figure 6: A graph of ultimate tensile strength and electrical conductivity of a single heat of material. The line is the linear, least squares fit to the data. Figure 7: Graph of conductivity vs. temperature for an 18 MS/m (31% IACS) CNS-V sample. Figure 8: A graph of the tensile properties of the material with respect to hardness. The lines are a linear least squares fit of the data.

The thermal conductivity from the 18.0 MS/m plate differed by about 2 percent between the two directions. At room temperature, the thermal conductivity was calculated to be 140 W/m/K (81 Btu/hr/ft/°F). This yields a Lorenz number6 of 2.65 x 10-8 W-ohm/K2. The 19.7 MS/m sample had a room temperature thermal conductivity of 162 W/m/K (94 Btu/hr/ft/°F). This yields a Lorenz number of 2.78 x 10-8 W-ohm/K2. This Lorenz number is consistent with that of other copper alloys and allows measurement of the electrical conductivity to provide a good approximation of the thermal conductivity.

Like most copper alloys at near room temperature, the thermal conductivity increases with increasing temperature. At 150°C, the 18.0 MS/m sample reached a conductivity of 174 W/m/K (100 Btu/hr/ft/°F). The 19.7 MS/m sample reached 198 W/m/K (114 Btu/hr/ft/°F). A graph of the temperature dependence of the thermal conductivity is given in Figure 7 for the 18.0 MS/m sample.

Figure 9: A histogram of Rockwell C hardness data taken from two commercial CNS-V plates.

Results of Mechanical Testing
The highest mechanical properties measured on a commercial sample of CNS-V were 883 MPa (128 ksi) ultimate tensile strength, 800 MPa (116 ksi) yield strength at 0.2% offset and 29.0 HRC. The measured elongation of this sample is 7.5% and its electrical conductivity is 18 MS/m (31% IACS).

Figure 8 shows the correlation between hardness and the ultimate and yield tensile properties derived from various heat treatments of 50 mm plate. These data are consistent with the alloy achieving a hardness of 29 HRC at a tensile strength of 883 MPa and yield strength of 800 MPa.

Figure 10: Fatigue data of several copper base mold alloys taken with a RR Moore type rotary fatigue machine.

A histogram of Rockwell C hardness from two other suppliers is shown in Figure 9. None of the readings exceeds 29 HRC. The hardest commercially available material that was tested averaged 27.9 HRC. Brinell hardness testing of this plate averaged 281.4 HBW. Conversion to HRC per ASTM E 140, Table 1 is 29.4. Rockwell hardness measurements are generally lower on average and show greater variation. This is probably due to the fact that the larger Brinell indenter contacts more of the harder silicides than the Rockwell C indenter.

Figure 10 shows a “SN” (stress, cycle number) fatigue graph of CNS-V and C17200 copper beryllium. The graph shows CNS-V to have slightly lower fatigue strength than copper beryllium. For CNS-V, two samples per stress level were measured and the highest cycle count is displayed. The data for copper beryllium are typical values derived from a much larger set of values that were averaged.

Figure 11: Hardness and conductivity for several common mold alloys.

Comparison with Other Mold Alloys
A comparison of several physical properties of common mold alloys is shown in Table 2. C17200 LH is over-aged C17200 copper beryllium. C969707 is UNS C96970 Cu-Ni-Sn spinodally hardened alloy. AISI P-20 is a Cr-Ni-Mo tool steel. All of these alloys are supplied in the 26-32 HRC hardness range. The hardness and thermal conductivity are summarized in Figure 11.

The data for P-20 were taken from published datasheets. The data for CNS-V were derived from a small number of measurements on some commercially available material (approximately 50mm thick plate) and some developmental material. Except where ranges are used, these data represent the properties of the “best-in-class” sample. The tensile and CVN data for C96970 are mean values for a large number of production samples. The tensile data for copper beryllium are the mean values for a large number of production samples. Compression and thermal conductivity data for all the copper alloys are from a small number of samples (from one to three).

Applications
With its high strength and conductivity, CNS-V has many applications in the mold industry. In blow molding it can be used as pinch-offs, neck rings and handle inserts. In injection molds, common applications include cores, inserts and slides. Other uses include sprue bushings and ejector pins. Because of its high upper working temperature (425° C), it also can be used successfully in hot runner nozzles; although being a high copper alloy, it is susceptible to oxidative corrosion at elevated temperatures.

A typical application for CNS-V as an insert in a steel mold. Photo courtesy of Brush Wellman.

Conclusion
CNS-V is an alloy system capable of achieving a maximum hardness of about 29 HRC at a thermal conductivity in excess of 138 W/m/K. A comparison with copper beryllium shows it may be a suitable replacement in applications where strength and hardness is not of paramount importance. However, copper beryllium has slightly higher strength at a similar conductivity. Also, unlike copper beryllium which is capable of 40 HRC hardness, CNS-V doesn’t appear to be capable of consistently providing hardness in excess of 28 HRC. CNS-V does have the advantage of having an upper operating temperature of 425°C while C17200 copper beryllium is limited to temperatures below 315°F.

This article has not dealt with the ability of the suppliers to provide the alloy in large sections. Currently no commercial supplier provides sections thicker than 4 inches. Experience indicates that large sections (greater than 6 inches in minimum cross-section) will not be consistently produced due to difficulties in uniformly heating and cooling such sections during heat treating.

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