Abstract

Studies are described of the progress of sintering and alloying in compacts of similar compositions made from nickel-coated copper, copper-coated nickel, and mixed nickel and copper powders. Density losses observed in the early stages of sintering were lower in magnitude and were more quickly recovered in the case of the composite powder compacts. Alloying by diffusion at both 1900 and 2200°F (1040 and 1205°C) progressed most rapidly in compacts prepared from nickel-coated copper powders, and the probable reasons for this observation are discussed in detail. Electrical resistivity was used to follow homogenization of the compacts, and samples were rendered nearly 100% dense by cold working and annealing before making resistivity measurements. Resistivity / sintering-time curves for dense specimens showed no maxima of the type reported by earlier investigators for porous compacts, which were attributed to alloying effects.

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