Detalle Publicación

Manufacturing of self-passivating tungsten based alloys by different powder metallurgical routes

Título de la revista: PHYSICA SCRIPTA
ISSN: 0031-8949
Volumen: T167
Número: 014041
Fecha de publicación: 2016
Resumen:
Self-passivating tungsten based alloys will provide a major safety advantage compared to pure tungsten when used as first wall armor of future fusion reactors, due to the formation of a protective oxide layer which prevents the formation of volatile and radioactive WO3 in case of a loss of coolant accident with simultaneous air ingress. Bulk WCr10Ti2 alloys were manufactured by two different powder metallurgical routes: (1) mechanical alloying (MA) followed by hot isostatic pressing (HIP) of metallic capsules, and (2) MA, compaction, pressureless sintering in H-2 and subsequent HIPing without encapsulation. Both routes resulted in fully dense materials with homogeneous microstructure and grain sizes of 300 nm and 1 mu m, respectively. The content of impurities remained unchanged after HIP, but it increased after sintering due to binder residue. It was not possible to produce large samples by route (2) due to difficulties in the uniaxial compaction stage. Flexural strength and fracture toughness measured on samples produced by route (1) revealed a ductile-to-brittle-transition temperature (DBTT) of about 950 degrees C. The strength increased from room temperature to 800 degrees C, decreasing significantly in the plastic region. An increase of fracture toughness is observed around the DBTT.