Abstract

The morphological and compositional changes of grains have been investigated in the initial stage of liquid-phase sintering of W-Mo-Ni-Fe powder compacts. Both large (5.4-μm) and small (1.3-μm) W powders have been used to vary their time of dissolution in the liquid matrix. When 8OW-10M0-7Ni-3Fe (wt pct) compacts of fine (about 1- to 2-μm) Mo, Ni, and Fe and coarse (5.4-μm) W powders are liquid-phase sintered at 1500 °C, the Mo powder and a fraction of the W powder rapidly dissolve in the Ni-Fe liquid matrix. The W-Mo grains (containing small amounts of Ni and Fe) nucleate in the matrix and grow while the W particles slowly dissolve. In this transient initial stage of the liquid-phase sintering, duplex structures of coarse W-Mo grains and fine W particles are obtained. As the W particles dissolve in the liquid matrix during the sintering, the W content in the precipitated solid phase also increases. The dissolution of the small W particles is assessed to be driven partially by the coherency strain produced by Mo diffusion at the surface. During sintering, the W particles continuously dissolve while the W-Mo grains grow. When the compacts are prepared from a fine (1.3-μm) W powder, the W grains dissolve more rapidly, in about 1 hour, and only W-Mo grains remain. These observations show that the morphological evolution of grains during liquid-phase sintering can be strongly influenced by the chemical equilibrium process.

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