[0001] This invention relates to the fabrication of annular articles and, more particularly,
to the fabrication of such annular articles from metal powders with minimal wasted
material.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] A number of important commercial articles have the shape of an annulus or annular
band. Such articles are typically, but not necessarily, thin-walled cylinders with
a large ratio of inner diameter-to-outer diameter (DI/DO) of greater than 0.75 but
less than 1.0. For example, in aircraft engines the turbine blade retainers and the
turbine cases are thin-walled cylinders having DI/DO of about 0.85 and 0.95, respectively.
[0003] Taking the turbine-blade retainer as an example, this article is often made from
a powder-metal, precipitation-strengthened nickel-base superalloy selected for use
in severe operating conditions. The nickel-base superalloy composition is melted and
atomized to form a powder, and consolidated by a combination of hot isostatic pressing,
hot compaction, and extrusion to form re-forge stock. The powder is then worked by
isothermal or hot-die forging into the form of a flat or contoured pancake. The center
section of the pancake is removed by trepanning, and the outer surface is machined
to a generally cylindrical form. This preform is machined to the required ratio of
inner diameter-to-outer diameter. The removed center section and chips become revert
material sent back to the melting operation.
[0004] While operable and in use today, this approach has several drawbacks. The isothermal
upset forge and trepan method is not feasible for components of appreciable axial
length (i.e., greater than about 6 inches in length) due to forging and trepan machining
equipment limitations. In addition, material flow is normal to the primary in-service
stresses, producing unfavorable materials properties. The current process is also
uneconomic, because large weights of expensive superalloy material are trepanned and
machined away, and are sold as lower-value scrap. Consequently, the "buy-to-fly" cost
ratio is high, typically 10:1 1 or more, and the final retainer article is overly
expensive to manufacture. The production of other articles such as turbine casings
from powder is not feasible due to unacceptable costs and insufficient forge capacity.
[0005] There is a need for an improved approach to the production of annular metallic articles
that results in improved properties with reduced cost. The present invention fulfills
this need, and further provides related advantages.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0006] The present invention provides an approach for fabricating an annular metallic article
from a powder starting material. The microstructure of the final article is homogeneous,
within the limits of the rolling process. The final article does not have cast-in
or working imperfections or cracking associated with production techniques using cast-and-wrought
procedures. The present approach is also highly economical in terms of the buy-to-fly
cost ratio, because little, if any, material is removed by trepanning or machining
of a center section.
[0007] A method for fabricating an annular metallic article comprises the steps of providing
a can having an outer wall, an inner wall, and a fill volume between the outer wall
and the inner wall, and loading a metallic powder into the fill volume. The metallic
powder is of a composition that has a precipitate solvus temperature, and a solidus
temperature, which is greater than the precipitate solvus temperature. The method
further includes compacting the metallic powder at a temperature between the precipitate
solvus temperature and the solidus temperature (i.e., greater than the precipitate
solvus temperature and less than the solidus temperature) to form a compacted powder
mass, and ring rolling the compacted powder mass to form the annular metallic article.
The step of compacting is preferably performed by hot isostatic pressing the can with
the metallic powder therein. Preferably, the method includes no press forging; the
method includes no extrusion; and the method includes no upset forging. The compacted
powder mass may be removed from the can after the step of compacting and before the
step of ring rolling, but the ring rolling may instead be performed with the can in
place.
[0008] The metallic powder is preferably made of a pre-alloyed nickel-base superalloy having
a gamma prime (γ') precipitate solvus temperature and a solidus temperature greater
than the precipitate solvus temperature. The step of compacting includes the step
of compacting the metallic powder above the gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature
and below the solidus temperature to produce a microstructure amenable to deformation
by the ring rolling method.
[0009] Ring rolling may be performed in any operable manner, but is preferably performed
at a temperature of below the precipitate solvus temperature to control grain size.
[0010] The final article may have an annular circular shape, so that it is cylindrically
symmetric with its outer surface and its inner surface both substantially cylindrical.
In the preferred case, the annular circular shape has a ratio of an inner diameter
to an outer diameter (DI/DO) of greater than 0.75 and less than 1.0. The approach
is operable with smaller ratios of DI/DO, but its greatest economic benefits are realized
when DI/DO is greater than 0.75 and less than 1.0. The final article need not be cylindrically
symmetric, and could have contoured cross-sectional shapes other than cylinders, such
as for example, annular truncated cones.
[0011] Thus, in a preferred embodiment a method for fabricating an annular metallic article
comprises the steps of providing a can having a cylindrical outer wall, a cylindrical
inner wall, and a fill volume between the outer wall and the inner wall, and loading
a metallic powder into the fill volume. The metallic powder is a pre-alloyed nickel-base
superalloy having a gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature and a nickel-base superalloy
solidus temperature above the gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature. The method
further includes compacting the metallic powder by hot isostatic pressing within the
can at a temperature above the gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature to form
a compacted powder mass, and ring rolling the compacted powder mass to form the metallic
article having an annular circular shape. No press forging, no extrusion, and no upset
forging are employed in the method. Other operable features described herein may be
used with this embodiment.
[0012] The present approach fabricates an annular metallic article from powder metal. The
material is not cast and wrought, so that there is no cracking, casting segregation,
or other imperfection resulting from casting and working operations. The present approach
allows the use of some highly alloyed metals that cannot be fabricated into annular
articles by the conventional approach, because they are too strong to be fabricated
by the conventional approach. The metal powder is initially loaded into the annular
fill volume of the can having an inner wall and an outer wall, and then the can with
the metal powder is consolidated. The resulting annular powder compact is then ring
rolled to the final form. The use of the hollow-can (that is, hollow between its inner
wall and its outer wall) approach results in relatively efficient utilization of the
powder metal in the final ring-rolled annular article--the "buy-to-fly" ratio is closer
to 1.0 than achieved by current methods. This approach greatly reduces or avoids entirely
the need to remove and scrap metal from the central portion of a conventional forging
as in prior approaches. The result is that the metallurgical and mechanical performances
of the final annular article, and its cost, are improved over that achieved by prior
approaches.
[0013] The present approach is to be contrasted with conventional ring rolling, in which
the ring-rolling stock is prepared by casting and upset forging. The working of the
reforge stock to a ring by conventional ring rolling would cause cracking in the nickel-base
superalloy, which normally has a high flow stress and limited ductility. Cracking
during conventional upset, punch, and ring rolling may be reduced by changing the
alloying content of the nickel-base superalloy to increase the ductility and achieve
the malleability required for the ring-rolled article, but the result is reduced material
performance in service. Textures and other characteristics of the rolled material
may be retained into the final article in the conventional ring-rolling approach,
resulting in anisotropic properties.
[0014] Other features and advantages of the present invention will be apparent from the
following more detailed description of the preferred embodiment, taken in conjunction
with the accompanying drawings, which illustrate, by way of example, the principles
of the invention. The scope of the invention is not, however, limited to this preferred
embodiment.
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0015]
Figure 1 is a perspective view of an annular metallic article;
Figure 2 is a sectional view through the annular metallic article of Figure 1, taken
on line 2-2;
Figure 3 is a block diagram of an approach for fabricating the annular metallic article;
and
Figure 4 is a schematic perspective view of a can, showing powder filling its interior;
and
Figure 5 is a schematic view of a ring-rolling apparatus and operation.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0016] Figures 1 and 2 depict an annular metallic article 20. The annular metallic article
20 has an outer surface 22, an inner surface 24, an interior volume 26 within the
inner surface 24, an axis 28 extending through the interior volume 26, and solid metal
in an annular volume 30 between the outer surface 22 and the inner surface 24. The
annular metallic article 20 may be cylindrical with the axis 28 as a cylindrical axis
so that the annular metallic article 20 is circular in cross section as illustrated
in Figure 2, or it may be noncircular in cross section. Where the annular metallic
article 20 is cylindrical with a circular cross section as shown in Figure 2, the
annular metallic article 20 may be described as having an outer diameter DO of the
outer surface 22 and an inner diameter DI of the inner surface 24. It is preferred,
but not necessary, that the ratio DI/DO be greater than 0.75 and less than 1.0, which
is termed herein a "thin-walled" annular article.
[0017] Figure 3 depicts a method for fabricating the annular metallic article 20. The method
includes providing a can 60, step 40. The can is desirably made of a metal such as
300-series stainless steel. The can 60, illustrated in Figure 4, has an outer wall
62, an inner wall 64, an annular fill volume 66 between the outer wall 62 and the
inner wall 64, an open top 68 to the fill volume 66, and preferably a solid bottom
70 to the fill volume 66. The annular fill volume 66 of the can 60 is initially empty
and hollow, but is subsequently filled with powder, as shown. Desirably, an open central
space 72 extends through the volume bounded by the inner wall 64.
[0018] A metallic powder 74 is loaded into the fill volume 66 of the can 60, step 42. In
the preferred embodiment, the metallic powder 74 is of a nickel-base superalloy composition
that has a gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature and a solidus temperature that
is greater than the gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature. That is, there is
a gamma prime phase that is present below the precipitate solvus temperature, and
that phase dissolves into the metallic matrix when the temperature is raised into
the range above the precipitate solvus temperature and below the solidus temperature
of the metal powder to improve malleability. The metallic powder 74 may be pre-alloyed
or not pre-alloyed, but pre-alloyed is preferred because subsequent processing is
typically not at a sufficiently high temperature and for a sufficiently long time
to achieve substantially complete homogeneity, if the powder is not furnished in the
pre-alloyed form.
[0019] In the applications currently of most interest, the metallic powder 74 is a nickel-base
superalloy composition. As used herein, "nickel-base" means that the composition has
more nickel than any other element. The nickel-base superalloy is defined as a nickel-base
alloy strengthened by the precipitation of gamma prime or a related phase. Some nickel-base
superalloys of particular interest include ReneTM 88DT, having a nominal composition,
in weight percent, of about 13 percent cobalt, about 16 percent chromium, about 4
percent molybdenum, about 3.7 percent titanium, about 2.1 percent aluminum, about
4 percent tungsten, about 0.75 percent niobium, about 0.015 percent boron, about 0.03
percent zirconium, about 0.05 percent carbon, up to about 0.5 percent iron, balance
nickel and minor impurity elements; and ReneTM 95, having a nominal composition, in
weight percent, of about 13 percent chromium, about 8 percent cobalt, about 3.5 percent
molybdenum, about 3.5 percent tungsten, about 3.5 percent niobium, about 2.5 percent
titanium, about 3.5 percent aluminum, about 0.01 percent boron, about 0.05 percent
zirconium, about 0.06 percent carbon, balance nickel and incidental impurities. Each
of these nickel-base superalloys has a gamma-prime precipitate solvus temperature
(less than the solidus temperature), above which the gamma-prime phase dissolves into
the gamma matrix, and below which the gamma-prime phase is thermodynamically stable.
These alloys are of particular interest in fabricating annular metallic articles 20
such as turbine blade retainers and turbine cases because they offer improved mechanical
performance to the articles but are of too high a strength and too low a malleability
to be fabricated by the conventional casting and upset forging approach. The present
approach allows annular metallic articles 20 of such materials to be fabricated of
such materials.
[0020] The metallic powder 74 is compacted at a temperature above the precipitate solvus
temperature and below the solidus temperature of the metallic powder 74 to form a
compacted powder mass with sufficient malleability to work by methods such as ring
rolling, step 44. To perform the compacting, the fill volume 66 having the metal powder
therein is sealed (and optionally evacuated), as by welding an annular top plate over
the open top 68. The compacting is preferably performed by hot isostatic pressing
(HIP) the metallic powder 74 within the can 60, thereby using the can as the containment
vessel for the hot isostatic pressing. Other operable compacting techniques such as
extrusion or upset forging may be used but are less preferred because they tend to
impart a preferred orientation to the compacted powder mass. However, if such a preferred
orientation is desired, these other techniques may be used. The compacting step 44
increases the relative density of the mass of metallic powder 74 and also causes the
individual particles to bond together and become cohesive. Because of the form of
the can 60 and the annular fill volume 66, the compacted powder mass is annular in
shape. A central portion of the compacted powder mass is therefore not trepanned or
otherwise removed, avoiding the need for this costly processing step found in conventional
approaches.
[0021] The compacted powder mass may optionally be removed from the can 60 at this point,
step 46. Alternatively, the next step may be performed with the compacted powder mass
still within the can 60. If the compacted powder mass is removed from the can 60,
the removal is preferably accomplished by machining the can 60 from the exterior of
the compacted powder mass.
[0022] The compacted powder mass is ring rolled to form the annular metallic article 20,
step 48. Ring rolling is a known rolling technology for other applications, but has
not been used in the present manner. Figure 5 schematically depicts the compacted
powder mass 76 being processed by a ring-rolling apparatus 78. The ring rolling step
48 starts with the annular compacted powder mass 76 resulting from step 44 (or from
step 46, if used), and continuously reduces a thickness T of the annular compacted
powder mass 76 as each portion passes between the ring rolls, until the desired thickness
is reached. If the annular compacted powder mass 76 is cylindrical, the final annular
metallic article 20 is typically cylindrical or nearly cylindrical, and can be straightened
to a cylindrical form if desired. The ring rolling is preferably performed at a ring-rolling
temperature below the gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature to control grain
growth and grain structure of the material during the ring rolling.
[0023] If the optional step 46 was not performed and the compacted powder mass was ring
rolled in the can 60 in step 48, the ring-rolled annular metallic article 20 may be
removed from the remnants of the can 60, step 50. (That is, either step 46 or step
50 is normally performed, but not both steps.) This removal is preferably accomplished
by machining the remnants of the can 60 from the ring-rolled annular metallic article
20. Alternatively, for some applications it may be desired to leave the remnants of
the metallic can 60 in place, and neither step 46 nor step 50 is performed. Subsequent
optional heat treatment processes, step 52, such as solution heat treating and precipitation
ageing may be performed with the can intact or after removal of the can.
[0024] The article may optionally be final processed, step 54, such as by final machining
and/or coating. The order of steps 50, 52, and 54, when performed, may be interchanged
as necessary or desired.
[0025] Although a particular embodiment of the invention has been described in detail for
purposes of illustration, various modifications and enhancements may be made without
departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. Accordingly, the invention is
not to be limited except as by the appended claims.
PARTS LIST
[0026]
| 20 |
Annular article |
70 |
Solid bottom |
| 22 |
Outer surface |
72 |
Central space |
| 24 |
Inner surface |
74 |
Metallic powder |
| 26 |
Interior volume |
76 |
Compacted powder |
| 28 |
Axis |
78 |
Ring-rolling apparatus |
| 30 |
Annular volume |
80 |
|
| 32 |
|
82 |
|
| 34 |
|
84 |
|
| 36 |
|
86 |
|
| 38 |
|
88 |
|
| 40 |
|
|
90 |
|
| 42 |
|
|
92 |
|
| 44 |
|
|
94 |
|
| 46 |
|
|
96 |
|
| 48 |
|
Figure 3 |
98 |
|
| 50 |
|
|
100 |
|
| 52 |
|
|
102 |
|
| 54 |
|
|
104 |
|
| 56 |
|
106 |
|
| 58 |
|
108 |
|
| 60 |
Hollow can |
110 |
|
| 62 |
Outer wall |
112 |
|
| 64 |
Inner wall |
114 |
|
| 66 |
Fill volume |
116 |
|
| 68 |
Open top |
118 |
|
| |
|
|
|
1. A method for fabricating an annular metallic article (20), comprising the steps of
providing a can (60) having an outer wall (62), an inner wall (64), and a fill volume
(66) between the outer wall (62) and the inner wall (64);
loading a metallic powder (74) into the fill volume (66), wherein the metallic powder
(74) is of a composition that has a precipitate solvus temperature and a solidus temperature
greater than the precipitate solvus temperature;
compacting the metallic powder (74) at a temperature between the precipitate solvus
temperature and the solidus temperature to form a compacted powder mass (76); and
ring rolling the compacted powder mass (76) to form the annular metallic article (20).
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of loading includes the step of
providing the metallic powder (74) made of a pre-alloyed nickel-base superalloy having
a gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of loading includes the step of
providing the metallic powder (74) made of a pre-alloyed nickel-base superalloy having
a gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature, and the step of compacting includes
the step of
compacting the metallic powder (74) above the gamma prime precipitate solvus temperature.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of loading includes the step of
providing a metallic-powder composition having too high a strength and too low a malleability
to be fabricated into an annular metallic article (20) by casting and upset forging.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of compacting includes the step of
hot isostatic pressing the can (60) with the metallic powder (74) therein.
6. The method of claim 1, wherein the method includes no press forging, no extrusion,
and no upset forging.
7. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of ring rolling includes the step of
ring rolling the compacted powder mass (76) at a temperature below the precipitate
solvus temperature.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of ring rolling includes the step of
ring rolling the compacted powder mass (76) to an annular circular shape.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein the step of ring rolling includes the step of
ring rolling the compacted powder mass (76) to an annular circular shape having a
ratio of an inner diameter to an outer diameter of greater than 0.75 and less than
1.0.
10. The method of claim 1, including an additional step, after the step of ring rolling,
of heat treating the annular metallic article (20).