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Effect of Prestraining of Recrystallization Temperature and Mechanical Properties of Commercial, Sintered, Wrought MolybdenumGiven three presumably identical lots of commercial, sintered, wrought molybdenum, the 1-hour recrystallization temperature of one lot remained above 2900 F by limiting the amount of effective restraining to 35 percent or less. Different recrystallization temperatures were obtained in various atmospheres, the highest in argon and the lowest in hydrogen. Metal thus fabricated and then stress-relieved possessed an ultimate tensile strength at room temperature within 10 percent of metal swaged 99 percent and also possessed equivalent ductility. At 1800 F, equivalent strength and ductility was obtained irrespective of the amount of swaging over the range of 10 to 99 percent. The amount of swaging greatly influenced the recrystallized grain size but the difference in grain size is not the major controlling factor which determines whether recrystallized molybdenum is ductile or brittle at room temperature.
Document ID
19930083641
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Other
Authors
Dike, Kenneth C
Long, Roger A
Date Acquired
August 16, 2013
Publication Date
July 1, 1953
Report/Patent Number
NACA-TN-2973
Report Number: NACA-TN-2973
Accession Number
93R12931
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
Keywords
MATERIALS, PROPERTIES - TENSILE
MATERIALS, PROPERTIES - STRUCTURE
ALLOYS, HEAT-RESISTING
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