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NASA's activities in the conservation of strategic aerospace materialsThe United States imports 50-100 percent of certain metals critical to the aerospace industry, namely, cobalt, columbium, chromium, and tantalum. In an effort to reduce this dependence on foreign sources, NASA is planning a program called Conservation of Strategic Aerospace Materials (COSAM), which will provide technology minimizing strategic metal content in the components of aerospace structures such as aircraft engines. With a proposed starting date of October 1981, the program will consist of strategic element substitution, process technology development, and alternate materials research. NASA's two-fold pre-COSAM studies center on, first, substitution research involving nickel-base and cobalt-base superalloys (Waspaloy, Udimet-700, MAE-M247, Rene 150, HA-188) used in turbine disks, low-pressure blades, turbine blades, and combustors; and, second, alternate materials research devoted initially to investigating possible structural applications of the intermetallic alloys nickel aluminide and iron aluminide.
Document ID
19810038131
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Stephens, J. R.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, Ohio, United States)
Date Acquired
August 11, 2013
Publication Date
October 1, 1980
Subject Category
Metallic Materials
Meeting Information
Meeting: Fall Meeting of the American Society for Metals
Location: Cleveland, OH
Start Date: October 28, 1980
End Date: October 30, 1980
Sponsors: American Society for Metals
Accession Number
81A22535
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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