Powder Metallurgy - A Simplified Model of the Sintering Process

Background

Sintering is the means whereby the powder particles are welded together and a strong finished part produced

The sintering of mechanical parts is usually done in a continuous belt furnace - in special cases a vacuum furnace is used.

Simplified Model

In a simplified model there is:

         A single metal

         Spherical particles in contact

In the pressing operation the powder particles are brought together and deformed at the points of contact.

At elevated temperature - the sintering temperature - the atoms can move more easily and quickly migrate along the particle surfaces (the technical term is Diffusion).

Metals consist of crystallites.

At the sintering temperature new crystallites form at the points of contact so that the original interparticle boundaries disappear, or become recognisable merely as grain boundaries (This process is called Recrystallisation)

The total internal surface area of the pressed body is reduced by sintering.

Neck-like junctions are formed between adjacent particles as can be seen on the adjoining scanning electron micrograph of sintered filter material made from spherical bronze powder.

AZoM - Metals, ceramics, polymers and composites - necking of adjacent particles during sintering of a powder metallurgy component.

Figure 1. Scanning electron micrograph showing necking between adjacent metal particles.

 

Source: The European Powder Metallurgy Association.

 

For more information on this source please visit The European Powder Metallurgy Association.

 

Date Added: Nov 14, 2002
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