Page 183 - 04. Subyek Engineering Materials - Manufacturing, Engineering and Technology SI 6th Edition - Serope Kalpakjian, Stephen Schmid (2009)
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|62      Chapter 6  Nonferrous Metals and Alloys: Production, General Properties, and Applications


                                   6.7    Titanium and Titanium Alloys

                                   Titanium (Ti, named after the Greek god Titan) is a silvery white metal discovered in
                                   1791, but not produced commercially until the 1950s. Although titanium is
                                   expensive, its high strength-to-weight ratio and corrosion resistance at room and
                                   elevated temperatures make it attractive for many applications, including aircraft; jet
                                   engines (see Fig. 6.1); racing cars; golf clubs; chemical, petrochemical, and marine
                                   components; submarine hulls; armor plate; and medical applications, such as orthope-
                                   dic implants (Table 6.10). Titanium alloys have been developed for service at 550°C
                                   for long periods of time and at up to 75 0°C for shorter periods.
                                        Unalloyed titanium, known as commercially pure titanium, has excellent
                                   corrosion resistance for applications where strength considerations are secondary.
                                   Aluminum, vanadium, molybdenum, manganese, and other alloying elements impart
                                   properties such as improved workability, strength, and hardenability.
                                        The properties and manufacturing characteristics of titanium alloys are ex-
                                   tremely sensitive to small variations in both alloying and residual elements. Therefore,
                                   control of composition and processing are important, especially the prevention of
                                   surface contamination by hydrogen, oxygen, or nitrogen during processing; these
                                   elements cause embrittlement of titanium and, consequently, reduce toughness and
                                   ductility.
                                        The body-centered cubic structure of titanium (beta-titanium) is above 880°C
                                   and is ductile, whereas its hexagonal close-packed structure (alpha-titanium) is some-
                                   what brittle and is very sensitive to stress corrosion. A variety of other structures
                                   (alpha, near-alpha, alpha-beta, and beta) can be obtained by alloying and heat treat-
                                   ing, so that the properties can be optimized for specific applications. Titanium alu-
                                   minide intermetallics (TiAl and Ti3Al; see Section 4.2.2) have higher stiffness and
                                   lower density than conventional titanium alloys and can withstand higher tempera-
                                   tures.

                                   Production.  Ores containing titanium first are reduced to titanium tetrachloride in
                                   an arc furnace, then converted to titanium chloride in a chlorine atmosphere. This
                                   compound is reduced further to titanium metal by distillation and leaching (dissolv-
                                   ing). This sequence forms sponge titanium, which is then pressed into billets, melted,
                                   and poured into ingots to be processed later into various shapes. The complexity of
                                   these multistep thermochemical operations (the Kroll process developed in the
                                    1940-1950s) adds considerably to the cost of titanium. New developments in elec-
                                   trochemical extraction processes are taking place to reduce the number of steps
                                   involved and the energy consumption, thereby reducing the cost of producing
                                   titanium.



          TABLE 6. I 0
           Properties and Typical Applications of Selected Wrought Titanium Alloys at Various Temperatures

                                               Ultimate                                     Ultimate
          Nominal                               tensile  Yield             Reduction         tensile  Yield
          composition                           strength  strength  Elongation  of area  Temp.  strength  strength
          (%)              UNS     Condition    (MPa)    (MPa)                        (°C)    (MPa)   (MPa)
          99.5 Ti         R50250  Annealed        330     240                          300     150      95
          5 Al, 2.5 Sn    R54520  Annealed        860     810                          300     565     450
          6 Al, 4 V       R56400  Annealed       1000     925                          300     725     650
                                  Solution + age  1175    1100                         300     980     900
          13 V, 11 Cr, 3 Al  R58010  Solution + age  1275  1210                        425    1100     830
   178   179   180   181   182   183   184   185   186   187   188