Stock material or miscellaneous articles – All metal or with adjacent metals – Having metal particles
Reexamination Certificate
1999-08-23
2003-02-18
Jenkins, D. J. (Department: 1742)
Stock material or miscellaneous articles
All metal or with adjacent metals
Having metal particles
C075S236000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06521353
ABSTRACT:
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
The present invention relates to the field of wear resistant materials and, in particular, to a low thermal conductivity hard alloy for, e.g., pelletizing die faces.
Pelletizing is a process for producing a uniform particle size of newly produced or recycled plastic resins. The petroleum industry uses this process to produce pelletized polyethylene, polypropylene, and other polymeric materials with filler materials in them to allow more efficient handling and processing of the materials. The pelletizing process begins with molten polymer from an extruder being forced through a die to form multiple strands of polymer resin. Typically, the pelletizing process is performed under water where the strands are cut by a rotating knife passing along the surface of the die face immediately upon exiting the die. This operation takes place in a closed environment as water circulates through to both cool the die face and to carry the pellets out of the closed environment. The pellets are then transferred to a dewatering/drying system prior to final packing or further processing.
Generally the die face of a pelletizer is formed of a different material than the body of the pelletizer or may be coated with a different material. Because most of the wear on the pelletizer occurs at the face, the use of a hard, wear resistant, and corrosion resistant die face material allows for longer life of the pelletizer. The die face material may be replaced several times before the die body must be changed. Die face materials are subject to a range of deleterious environmental conditions such as, for example, temperature extremes, submersion in a water environment, and constant surface abrasion from the flowing polymer material and movement of the cutting knives. In addition to being hard and wear resistant, a die face material also should have low thermal conductivity and high corrosion resistance.
The two most common die face materials used as wear pads and orifice nibs today are ferro-titanium carbide (Ferro-TiC) and tungsten carbide cobalt (WC-Co) alloys. The wear pads and orifice nibs are embedded in a stainless steel alloy and/or a ceramic material of the die face plate. Ferro-TiC is a machineable and hardenable alloy/steel bonded titanium carbide. Ferro-TiC is typically a metal matrix composite of titanium carbide (TiC) plus chromium (Cr), molybdenum (Mo), carbon-iron alloy (C—Fe), and/or titanium. For example, a typical Ferro-TiC composition, as recited in U.S. Pat. No. 5,366,138 (Vela et al.), includes 30-32% TiC, 9-10% Cr, 3-6.5% Co, 3-4.5% Ni, 2-4% Mo, 0-1% Al, 1-2% Ti, 0-1% Cr, and 40-50% Fe. The ultra-hard, rounded titanium carbide grains are uniformly distributed throughout a hardenable steel alloy matrix. Fabrication in the annealed state is accomplished with ordinary tools and equipment, followed by conventional heat treatment to obtain maximum hardness.
WC-Co based cemented carbides include a range of composite materials which contain hard carbide particles bonded together by a metallic binder. The proportion of carbide phase is generally between 70-97% of the total weight of the composite and its grain size averages between 0.2 and 14 &mgr;m. For example, a typical cobalt bound tungsten carbide material is disclosed in U.S. Pat. No. 4,923,512 (Timm et al.) Timm et al. recites a composition having WC in an amount of 83 to 99 weight % and cobalt in an amount of 1-18 weight %. Tungsten carbide (WC), the hard phase, together with cobalt (Co), the binder phase, forms the basic cemented carbide structure. In addition to WC-Co compositions, cemented carbide may contain small proportions of secondary carbides such as titanium carbide (TiC), tantalum carbide (TaC), and niobium carbide (NbC). These secondary carbides are mutually soluble and can also dissolve a high proportion of tungsten carbide. In addition, cemented carbides are produced which have the cobalt binder phase alloyed with, or completely replaced by, other metals such as nickel (Ni), chromium (Cr), molybdenum (Mo), iron (Fe), or alloys of these elements. Thus, there are typically three individual phases which make up a cemented carbide, the &agr;-phase of tungsten carbide, the &bgr;-phase of a binder material (e.g. Co, Ni, etc.), and the &ggr;-phase which is a single or solid solution carbide phase (e.g., of WC and TiC, and/or TaC, and/or NbC, and/or nitrides or carbonitrides).
Ferro-TiC alloys, although generally effective in wear-resistance applications, are more expensive than comparable WC-Co alloys and are more difficult to work. For example, while WC-Co alloys can be inexpensively and easily silver soldered or brazed in air to a die body, Ferro-TiC alloys cannot be silver soldered or brazed directly to the die by conventional methods.
WC-Co materials, though having similar corrosion and wear resistance to Ferro-TiC alloys when used as orifice nibs, suffer from undesirably high thermal conductivity. High thermal conductivity leads to the freezing off of the polymer in the die as the orifice nib conducts heat from the polymer being extruded. This is predominant when filler materials are involved.
Attempts have been made to form a WC-TiC-Co sintered alloy since it has improved chemical stability, but current alloys exhibit relatively high thermal conductivity and poor wear resistance in comparison to WC-Co alloys and Ferro-TiC alloys. Therefore, it is conventionally thought in the industry that high amounts of TiC in WC-Co cemented carbides results in poor wear performance of final products.
There is needed, therefore, a hard metal alloy material for use in pelletizing die faces and other high-wear applications that is relatively inexpensive, easily worked, chemically stable, and has low thermal conductivity and high wear resistance.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
The above needs are satisfied by the present invention which provides a hard alloy material comprising tungsten carbide in an amount less than about 80 weight percent of the material, titanium carbide in an amount of at least about 10 weight percent, and a binder material of cobalt and nickel. Though tungsten carbide based, the thermal conductivity of the material of the invention is between 10 and 20 Watt/m° K, compared to WC-Co cemented carbide materials which typically exhibit thermal conductivities of 80 to 100 Watt/m° K. In other aspects of the invention, molybdenum and chromium are included in the binder material to further lower the thermal conductivity and to improve the corrosion resistance of the material. In yet another aspect of the invention, one or more nitrides or carbonitrides of titanium and/or zirconium are included in the material incomplete or partial replacement of the titanium carbide.
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Jenkins D. J.
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Prizzi John J.
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