AU7224881A – Method for manufacturing tubes
– Google Patents
AU7224881A – Method for manufacturing tubes
– Google Patents
Method for manufacturing tubes
Info
Publication number
AU7224881A
AU7224881A
AU72248/81A
AU7224881A
AU7224881A
AU 7224881 A
AU7224881 A
AU 7224881A
AU 72248/81 A
AU72248/81 A
AU 72248/81A
AU 7224881 A
AU7224881 A
AU 7224881A
AU 7224881 A
AU7224881 A
AU 7224881A
Authority
AU
Australia
Prior art keywords
infiltration
tube
metal powder
sintering
moulding
Prior art date
1980-06-11
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Abandoned
Application number
AU72248/81A
Inventor
L M Bruce
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Uddeholms AB
Original Assignee
Uddeholms AB
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
1980-06-11
Filing date
1981-06-10
Publication date
1982-01-07
1980-06-11
Priority claimed from SE8004338A
external-priority
patent/SE430858B/en
1981-06-10
Application filed by Uddeholms AB
filed
Critical
Uddeholms AB
1982-01-07
Publication of AU7224881A
publication
Critical
patent/AU7224881A/en
Status
Abandoned
legal-status
Critical
Current
Links
Espacenet
Global Dossier
Discuss
Description
METHOD FOR MANUFACTURING TUBES
The present invention relates to a method for manu¬ facturing tubes by sintering.
It has long been known to manufacture tubes of ceramic material by extrusion and firing (sintering) in a furnace. It is also known to glaze such tubes at one stage of the firing in order to obtain tight sur¬ faces. Fired, glazed or unglazed clay tubes of circular cross-section in general are manufactured in predeter¬ mined lengths, but both the moulding process and the firing may be performed continuously, i.e. the moulding can be effected by injection moulding and the firing can be effected during continuous travel through a tube furnace. If the tubes are to be glazed or enamelled, the glaze or the enamel can be applied for instance by dipping or spraying.
The object of the invention is to provide tight and strong metallic tubes by using this per se known technique as well as metal sintering technique and sealing of sintered bodies by infiltration. One drawback in connection with the manufacture of ceramic products is that, subsequently to moulding and prior to firing, the products require a relatively ex¬ tended drying time and that the products are sensitive to deformation during a considerable part of the drying time. By suitable peptization it is possible to prepare a slurry of high dry content, such as 65-70%, and such a relatively dry, ceramic mass can be moulded in that it is deformable to a great extent without breaking, and can retain its shape with a very slight elastic recovery. The drying time for a ceramic mass of relati¬ vely high dry content is of course shorter than for a ceramic mass of lower dry content.
A ceramic raw material mixture is normally carried out as a wet mixture to form a slurry having a 30-50%
mo-i-sture content, whereupon the starting material can be dewatered in filter presses for preparing a-moulding compound which can be compression moulded or extruded to tubular shape. Another method is to perform isostatic pressing of a dry ceramic powder under such conditions that the powder is fired at the same time.
Another object of the present invention is to make use of these per se known methods in the manufac- ture of ceramic products, to produce strong, tight tubes of sintered metal powder, and a particular object is to achieve a method for the manufacture of tubes in which the. major portion of the tube wall may be of a relatively coarse-grained structure while the tube wall has a very close inner or outer surface structure with a smooth or slick surface.
As infiltration material may be used a material – which is liquid or during the sintering process is liquefied for infiltration of the pores of the moulded ” tube and which after the infiltration process is caused to solidify in situ.
When the tube is moulded by extrusion, use can be made of a moulding compound consisting of metal powder and a wetting agent. As wetting agent may be used a hydrocarbon, for instance alcohol, which readily evapo¬ rates by drying prior to the sintering process or which during the sintering process is readily driven off by heat. A wetting agent in the form-of a hydrocarbon can be used for giving the metal powder, such as iron or steel powder, a suitable carbon content, the hydrogen part of the hydrocarbon being useful for reducing oxide inclusions and/or for producing a hydrogen gas atmos¬ phere. It is also possible to use carbon- and hydrogen- based binders, such as binders based on starch or cellu- lose, the carbon and the hydrogen being useful in the above indicated way during the sintering process.
According to the invention, the entire moulding
and sintering process can be conducted under vacuum or in protective atmosphere.
The method of performing isostatic pressing of a dry powder may be used in such a manner that dry metal powder is pressed to tubular shape under such a pres¬ sure that a certain sintering occurs. Pressing can be conducted in a furnace or the pressed and presintered tube from the pressing station can be introduced in a sintering furnace. When sintering metal powder mixtures of a particle size of about 250 “μm and above, it has proved difficult to obtain smooth surfaces ‘ even if infiltration is effected in the direction of a moulding surface, for in¬ stance in the direction of armandrel,which is used for forming the cavity of the tube. The reason for this is that a relatively coarse-grained structure will give rise to a tendency to back suction of the infiltration material from the respective tube surface, such as the inner side of the tube, to the material constituting the tube wall when the temperature is lowered after sintering.
According to the invention it has proved possible to overcome this problem by forming the inner side of the .tube from a fine-grained metal powder and by form- – ing the rest, i.e. the major portion, of the tube wall from a more coarse-grained metal powder. By carrying out the infiltration at one sintering stage in the direction from the outer side of the tube towards the • mandrel and, thus, in -a direction from the coarse- grained structure towards the fine-grained structure, there is obtained,by capillary action,a most complete filling of the pores in the fine-grained structure,and back suction of the liquid infiltration material from the fine-grained to the coarse-grained tube wall struc- ture is avoided.
The method of manufacturing the tube wall of at least two metal powders or metal powder mixtures of
different average particle sizes however requires at least two moulding steps. In the first moulding step, a fine powder layer is formed on the mandrel and, in the second moulding step, there is formed on the fine powder layer a second layer of metal powder of coarser average particle size, the second layer comprising the major part of the tube wall, if the tube wall is formed of only two layers. The two layers can be formed by extrusion or transfer moulding between the mandrel and two nozzles of different.diameters, but it is also possible, for example, to form the fine powder layer from a casting or moulding compound, i.e. a fine metal powder moistened by a suitable wetting agent as describ above, and to form the outer layer from a dry powder by pressing. The reverse procedure is also possible. The moulding of the outer layer should of course be so performed that the inner layer is not wrecked, but it is also advantageous to perform the moulding of the outer layer in such a manner that sharp interfaces between the inner fine powder layer and the outer layer of coarser powder are eliminated. Therefore, it is pre¬ ferred that the fine powder layer is stabilized in that the natural bonding tendency between the fine powder grains is increased by means of a suitable bonding promoting agent, such as liquid hydrocarbon, for in¬ stance alcohol, or an organic or possibly an inorganic binder.
For the moulding in particular of the outer layer of relatively coarse-grained metal powder, pressing or stamping can be effected by means of an annular plunger. As infiltration material may be used a suitable metal whose melting point is lower than the sintering temperature and which wets the metal grains , but it is also possible to use an enamel slip or a suitable glaze which is easily sucked into the tube wall consisting of metal powder during one sintering phase. For certain pur poses, use may be made of plastics, such as teflon or nyl
as infiltration material.
‘in accordance with the invention, it is of course possible to manufacture tubes in such a manner that the outer layer of the tube wall is made from a fine- grained metal powder or such that, both the inner and the outer surface layer of the tube wall are manufac¬ tured from a fine metal powder and the rest from a coarser powder.
The manufacture can be performed in steps for the production of tube lengths or in a continuous process. During disengagement the mandrel can be moved succes¬ sively or be alternatingly advanced and retracted. Sintering may be performed during travel of the moulded tube through a furnace, and infiltration may be per- formed while the mandrel is still inside the tube at the infiltration site, so that the infiltration material is also formed by the mandrel when it penetrates up to the inner side of the tube wall.
Claims (4)
1. A method for manufacturing tubes by sintering and infiltration, characterized in that the tube wall is formed from a metal powder on a mandrel, that the moulded tube is sintered and that the tube wall, during one sintering stage, is sealed by infiltration by means of an infiltration material which is liquid or is liquefied at a temperature lower than the maximum sintering temperature used and’ which is capable of wetting the metal powder particles and of solidifying when the sintering temperature is lowered.
2. Method as claimed in claim 1, characterized in that the moulding of the tube is effected by wet or dry pressing or extrusion of the metal powder.
3. Method as claimed in claim 1 or- 2, characterized in that a surface layer at the inner and/or outer circumferential surface of the tube wall is .formed from a relatively fine-grained metal powder and the rest of- the ttibe wall from a coarser metal powder which is forme on the fine powder layer, and that the infiltration is carried out in a direction from the coarse powder structure towards and into the fine powder structure.
4. Method as claimed in claim 3, characterized in that the infiltration is carried out while a moulding surface, against which a surface, for instance the fine powder surface, of the tube wall has been formed, for instance the surface of the mandrel for forming the cavity of the ttibe, still remains in the tube at the sintering site, such that the infiltration material is shaped by the moulding surface by penetrating up to it.
AU72248/81A
1980-06-11
1981-06-10
Method for manufacturing tubes
Abandoned
AU7224881A
(en)
Applications Claiming Priority (3)
Application Number
Priority Date
Filing Date
Title
SE8004338A
SE430858B
(en)
1980-06-11
1980-06-11
SET FOR PREPARATION OF SINTERED AND INFILTRATED Pipes
SE8004338-3
1980-06-11
PCT/SE1981/000173
WO1981003633A1
(en)
1980-06-11
1981-06-10
Method for manufacturing tubes
Publications (1)
Publication Number
Publication Date
AU7224881A
true
AU7224881A
(en)
1982-01-07
Family
ID=26657600
Family Applications (1)
Application Number
Title
Priority Date
Filing Date
AU72248/81A
Abandoned
AU7224881A
(en)
1980-06-11
1981-06-10
Method for manufacturing tubes
Country Status (1)
Country
Link
AU
(1)
AU7224881A
(en)
1981
1981-06-10
AU
AU72248/81A
patent/AU7224881A/en
not_active
Abandoned
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