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Tensile Properties of Molybdenum and Tungsten from 2500 to 3700 FSpecimens of commercially pure sintered tungsten, arc-cast unalloyed molybdenum, and two arc-cast molybdenum-base alloys (one with 0.5 percent titanium, the other with 0.46 percent titanium and 0.07 percent zirconium) were fabricated from 1/2-inch-diameter rolled or swaged bars. All specimens were evaluated in short-time tensile tests in the as-received condition, and all except the molybdenum-titanium-zirconium alloy were tested after a 30-minute recrystallization anneal at 3800 F in a vacuum of approximately 0.1 micron. Results showed that the tungsten was considerably stronger than either the arc-cast unalloyed molybdenum or the molybdenum-base alloys over the 2500 to 3700 F temperature range. Recrystallization of swaged tungsten at 3800 F considerably reduced its tensile strength at 2500 F. However, above 3100 F, the as-swaged tungsten specimens recrystallized during testing, and had about the same strength as when recrystallized at 3800 F before evaluation. The ductility of molybdenum-base materials was very high at all test temperatures; the ductility of tungsten decreased sharply above about 3120 F.
Document ID
19980228399
Acquisition Source
Headquarters
Document Type
Other - NASA Memorandum (MEMO)
Authors
Hall, Robert W.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Sikora, Paul F.
(NASA Lewis Research Center Cleveland, OH United States)
Date Acquired
September 6, 2013
Publication Date
February 1, 1959
Subject Category
Metallic Materials
Report/Patent Number
NASA-MEMO-3-9-59E
E-191
Report Number: NASA-MEMO-3-9-59E
Report Number: E-191
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Work of the US Gov. Public Use Permitted.
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