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Featured researches published by Kwang S. Shin.


International Journal of Refractory Metals & Hard Materials | 1991

Solution softening mechanism of iridium and rhenium in tungsten at room temperature

Anhua Luo; Dean L. Jacobson; Kwang S. Shin

Abstract With the highest melting temperature among metals, tungsten possesses a combination of properties desired for space nuclear power applications. One of the major deterrents to the application of tungsten lies in its low-temperature brittleness. The poor ductility of tungsten at room temperatures results in great difficulty in fabrication. Various approaches, including purification and alloying, have been employed to ductilize tungsten at room temperature. The fact that rhenium additions increase the ductility of tungsten was first reported by Geach and Hughes 1 in 1956, and following study confirmed that rhenium added to tungsten not only improves the room temperature fabricability, but also increases the high-temperature strength. The alloy system studied most in the past was tungsten-rhenium binary system, and the mechanical test conducted was limited to the bending test which was far from enough to examine the solution softening mechanism of rhenium in tungsten. The effect of rhenium on the room temperature mechanical properties of tungsten-rhenium-thoria ternary system has not been researched. Besides, based on its similarity to rhenium in electron structure, iridium (Ir) appears to be another potential softening element in tungsten. But so far, there are no mechanical data available for tungsten-iridium system, either at room temperature or at high temperatures. In the present study, a comprehensive investigation has been performed on the room-temperature hardness, tensile properties, microstructure and fracture behavior of various tungsten-iridium and tungsten-rhenium-thoria alloys. The objective of this study was to examine the solid-solution softening mechanism of iridium in unalloyed tungsten and that of rhenium in thoriated tungsten at room temperature. The effect of alloying elements on the fracture behavior of tungsten-iridium and tungsten-rhenium-thoria alloys was also examined.


Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 1991

High temperature tensile properties of WReThO2 alloys

Anhua Luo; Kwang S. Shin; Dean L. Jacobson

The tensile properties of WRe1wt.%ThO2 alloys with rhenium concentrations of 0–26wt.% were examined in a temperature range 1600–2600 K. The effects of rhenium concentrations, testing temperature and strain rate on the strength properties and deformation behavior of these alloys were investigated. It was found that rhenium had a moderate strengthening effect of the thoriated tungsten at temperatures up to about 2000 K. In the temperature range 2000–2600 K, rhenium concentrations above 11 wt.% in the thoriated tungsten resulted in a strength degradation instead of strengthening owing to rhenium-introduced structural instability. The addition of rhenium increased both the temperature sensitivity and the strain rate sensitivity of the thoriated tungsten at high temperatures. The post-test specimens were characterized by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. The dominant deformation mechanism was the cross-slip of screw dislocations when deformation occurred in the temperature range 1600–2000 K and was grain boundary sliding when deformation occurred at temperatures above 2000 K. An examination on the fracture surfaces of the tensile-fractured specimens showed that the fracture mode of the WRe1wt.%ThO2 alloys experienced a transition from transgranular to intergranular with either increasing temperature or increasing rhenium concentrations.


Acta Metallurgica Et Materialia | 1992

Hafnium carbide strengthening in a tungsten-rhenium matrix at ultrahigh temperatures

Anhua Luo; Kwang S. Shin; Dean L. Jacobson

Tungsten--rhenium--hafnium carbide (W---Re---HfC) alloy is the strongest metallic material at temperatures greater than 2000 K. In the this paper, the mechanical properties of tungsten and a W--3.6Re--0.26HfC alloy were determined from 1700 to 2980 K in a vacuum below 10[sup [minus]5] Pa. hfC particles had an exceptional strengthening effect n the tungsten-rhenium matrix at temperatures up to 2700 K. The strengthening was attributed to the high thermodynamic stability of HfC particles at ultrahigh temperatures. The growth behavior of HfC particles in the tungsten-rhenium matrix is examined. Carbon is found to be the rate-limiting element in the growth process of HfC particles. The strengthening mechanisms in a W--3.6Re--0.26HfC were discussed. It was concluded that the strength of a dispersion-strengthened material was proportional to the square root of the volume fraction of the particles. The calculation of a W--3.6Re--0.26HfC alloys yield strength, calculated based on the dislocation pinning and the particle statistical distribution, was in good agreement with the experimental data over the entire temperature range.


Scripta Metallurgica Et Materialia | 1991

Ultrahigh temperature tensile properties of arc-melted tungsten and tungsten-iridium alloys

Anhua Luo; Kwang S. Shin; Dean L. Jacobson

Tungsten is one of the most important metals for high temperature applications. The major deterrents to the use of tungsten are poor fabricability at room temperature and rapid decrease in strength at temperatures above 1600 K. Previous investigations have shown that the addition of rhenium to tungsten improves both room- temperature fabricability and high-temperature strength. Based on its similarity to rheniums electron structure, iridium as another potential alloying element in tungsten. It was recently confirmed that tungsten-iridium alloys with less than 1.0w/o iridium exhibit better fabricability than tungsten-rhenium alloys at room temperature. The strength properties of tungsten-iridium alloys at ultrahigh temperatures have not yet been researched. The present paper reports the tensile properties of dilute tungsten-iridium alloys in the temperature range 1600 to 2600 K. The focus of the present paper is to examine the effects of iridium concentration and test temperature on the strength and fracture behavior of tungsten-iridium alloys at ultrahigh temperatures.


Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 1992

Effects of thoria particles on the high-temperature tensile properties of a W-26wt.%Re alloy

Anhua Luo; Kwang S. Shin; Dean L. Jacobson

Abstract The tensile properties of powder-metallurgy-processed W-26wt.%Re and W-26wt.%Re-1wt.%ThO 2 were examined over the temperature range 1600–2600 K in a strain rate range 10 −3 –10 −2 s −1 . It was found that the addition of ThO 2 particles significantly reduced grain boundary migration and hence stabilized the microstructure of W-26Re at elevated temperatures. ThO 2 particle strengtheninge in W-26Re was effective up to 2200 K. The strengthening mechanisms were attributed to microstructure stabilization, misfit dilatation, and inhomogeneous deformation in the vicinity of ThO 2 particles. The addition of ThO 2 increased both temperature sensitivity and strain rate sensitivity of W-26Re at high temperatures. Post-test specimens were characterized by scanning electron microscopy and transmission electron microscopy. Both W-26Re-1ThO 2 and W-26Re exhibited an intergranular fracture mode when fractured at high temperatures.


Scripta Metallurgica Et Materialia | 1991

Ultrahigh-temperature tensile properties of a powder metallurgy processed tungsten-3.6w/o rhenium-1.0w/o thoria alloy

Anhua Luo; Dean L. Jacobson; Kwang S. Shin

Metals that have been dispersion hardened with stable oxides provide ideal systems to study the strengthening effect of second-phase particles at high temperatures. Thoria (ThO{sub 2}), a compound having the highest melting temperature among all the metallic oxides, is one of the most promising second-phase particles in strengthening tungsten at ultrahigh temperatures. On the other hand, tungsten has been severely limited due to the difficulties experienced in fabrication. An effective way to lower the ductile-brittle transition temperature of tungsten is to alloy with rhenium at a composition of about 4.0 weight percent rhenium. Therefore, it is necessary to add both thoria and rhenium to tungsten in order to improve the high-temperature strength and room-temperature fabricability. The present paper reports the tensile properties of a thoria particle strengthened W-Re alloy at ultrahigh temperatures. The present study was focused on the strengthening mechanism of dispersed thoria particles in the W-Re matrix and the deformation behavior of a power metallurgy processed W-Re-ThO{sub 2} alloy in a temperatures range of 1400 to 2600 K.


JOM | 1990

High-Temperature Properties of Particle-Strengthened W-Re

Kwang S. Shin; Anhua Luo; Bor-Liang Chen; Dean L. Jacobson

In recent years there has been renewed interest in the development of tungsten alloys for space power and advanced aerospace propulsion systems. Tungsten alloys have great potential for ultrahigh-temperature applications because of their thermal capabilities and exceptional high-temperature mechanical properties. Recent investigations of second-phase particle-strengthened W-Re alloys show that fine HfC and ThO2 particles significantly improve the high-temperature tensile and creep properties of tungsten alloys. The superior high-temperature strengths of these alloys above 2,000K are attributed to the strong interaction between these second-phase particles and dislocations as well as excellent stability of these particles.


International Journal of Refractory Metals & Hard Materials | 1992

Strength properties and deformation behaviour of arc-melted and powder-metallurgy-processed tungstens at high temperatures

Anhua Luo; Dean L. Jacobson; Kwang S. Shin

Abstract The strength properties, deformation behavior, and fracture mode of arc-melted (A/M) and powder-metallurgy-processed (P/M) tungstens were determined from 1600 to 2700 K in order to provide the baseline data for the development of tungsten-base alloys. The equicohesive temperature of tungsten was found to be approximately 2300 K, below which P/M tungsten showed higher tensile strength and greater work-hardening rate than A/M tungsten. The opposite was true at temperatures above 2300 K. Empirical equations were developed to predict the strength properties of tungsten as a function of grain size and temperature. A/M tungsten, which had relatively small deformation constraint and strong grain-boundary cohesion, showed a greater ductility than P/M tungsten over the entire temperature range. The high temperature fracture morphology of A/M tungsten was transgranular, whereas it was intergranular for P/M tungsten.


AIP Conference Proceedings (American Institute of Physics); (United States) | 2008

Solution softning and strengthening of iridium in arc‐melted tungsten

Anhua Luo; Kwang S. Shin; Dean L. Jacobson

A comprehensive investigation has been performed on the hardness, tensile properties, microstructure, and fracture behavior of arc‐melted W and W‐Ir alloys at room temperature and from 1600 K to 2600 K. The objectives of the present study were to examine solution softening effect of Ir in W at room‐temperature, and to characterize the strength properties of dilute W‐Ir alloys as the functions of iridium content at high temperatures. Tensile tests were conducted in a vacuum better than 1.3×10−5 Pa (10−7 torr) with a strain rate of 10−3/sec. It was found that iridium was more effective insoften and ductilize tungsten than rhenium at room temperature, and the minimum hardness and maximum elongation occurred at iridium content about 0.4 wt.%. In dilute W‐Ir alloys, the high‐temperature strength increment was proportional to the atomic content of iridium. And the addition of iridium in arc‐melted tungsten substantially increased both the strain‐hardening exponent and the activation energy of plastic deformatio...


Proceedings of the ninth symposium on space nuclear power systems | 2008

Effects of rhenium on the high temperature mechanical properties of a tungsten‐1.0W/O thoria alloy

Anhua Luo; Kwang S. Shin; Dean L. Jacobson

The mechanical properties of W‐Re‐1ThO2 alloys with rhenium concentrations from zero to 26 percent were determined over the temperature range 1600 to 2600 K. The effects of rhenium on the strength properties and deformation behavior of a tungsten‐1.0w/o thoria alloy were examined. It was found that rhenium had a moderate strengthening effect on thoriated tungsten at temperatures up to about 2000 K. In the temperature range 2000 to 2600 K, rhenium concentrations above 11 percent in thoriated tungsten resulted in a strength degradation instead of strengthening due to rhenium‐introduced structural instability. The addition of rhenium increased both the temperature sensitivity and strain rate sensitivity of the thoriated tungsten at high temperatures. The dominant deformation mechanism was the cross‐slip of screw dislocations when deformation occurred in the temperature range 1600 to 2000 K. Grain‐boundary sliding dominated the deformation at temperatures above 2000 K. An examination on the fracture surfaces ...

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Anhua Luo

Arizona State University

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Bor-Liang Chen

Arizona State University

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