"Soft" Tungsten Mystifies - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS Publications)

Nov 6, 2010 - R ESEARCHERS at the U.S. Bureau of Mines, Albany, Ore., have stumbled onto an unusual form of tungsten. So far as they can tell from the...
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"Soft" Tungsten Mystifies Reduction of the pure oxide with calcium produces a tungsten that can be cut with a hacksaw

High Molecular Weight

JCVESEARCHERS at the U.S. Bureau of

Polymeric Plasticlzer

Mines, Albany, Ore., have stumbled onto an unusual form of tungsten. So far as they can tell from their tests, the metal is almost pure tungsten. Yet, by comparison with ordinary tungsten, it is softer, less brittle, and more deformable. Biggest difference is in crystal size, which is many times smaller than crystals of tungsten pro­ duced by arc melting, for example. The BuMines group at Albany has been working on pure metals for some time. One of its approaches—purify metal oxides chemically, reduce them with pure calcium, magnesium, or other suitable metal. It has been working its way through the reactive metals, hit this finding when it got to tungsten. The Albany scientists, along with many other metallurgists around the country, have also been trying to purify these metals by various types of vacuum melting. These workers have blamed brittleness of most of them on adsorbed interstitial gases, have been able to up ductility in most by getting rid of these gases. But BuMines doesn't yet have enough data to tell whether the ductil­ ity of its tungsten is related to adsorbed gases. In fact, the finding is so new that it doesn't even have hardness fig­ ures on its experimental tungsten yet. The metal has been hammer forged at 900° C—a temperature considered quite cool for tungsten—to 70% of its original thickness. At the same time, porosity was eliminated without crum­ bling. A more impressive measure of the metal's softness: It can be hacksawed. Tiy this with ordinary tung­ sten and you'll simply run out of blades. Problem now is to find out more about the metal so it can be put to some practical use. If it can be successfully formed into sheets, the most obvious application, BuMines says, is as a fab­ ricating material in high speed aircraft. No metal has a higher melting point than tungsten. BuMines prepares the metal in a re­

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duction bomb, a sealed, insulated tube used widely in making vanadium and uranium. In this case, metallic calcium reacting with tungstic oxide in the bomb produces enough heat of reac­ tion-well over 3400° C— to melt the tungsten metal that is formed. Solidi­ fied, the tungsten is rather porous, probably as a result of contact with calcium vapor. Another thing puzzling the BuMines researchers: The "soft" tungsten be­ comes ordinary tungsten when it is remelted by standard methods.

Plastics Men Get Together Scientists working with plastics can look forward to a better understanding of their foreign counterparts. The In­ ternational Organization for Standard­ ization (ISO) is expected to approve and publish soon an international stand­ ard, listing for 800 plastics terms the equivalent expressions in English, French, and Russian. An appendix will cover equivalents in Spanish, Ger­ man, and Italian. The ISO technical committee on plastics, meeting in Munich last fall, set up the standard. The work was prompted by misunderstandings which have arisen from inconsistent nomen­ clature and began in 1951. With the new standard, words will have the same meanings to all plastics scientists. Ex­ ample: "accelerator," which will mean "substance which increases catalytically the hardening rate of a synthetic resin." Besides nomenclature, the technical committee is covering other world-wide plastics problems. Among these: test methods to determine properties; speci­ fications for plastics.

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