新型材料赋予铜合金类似超合金的强度
New material gives copper superalloy-like strength

原始链接: https://news.lehigh.edu/new-material-gives-copper-superalloy-like-strength-0

来自美国陆军研究实验室(ARL)、利哈伊大学、亚利桑那州立大学和路易斯安那州立大学的研究人员开发了一种新型铜基合金,该合金在极端温度下仍能保持其强度和形状。这一突破源于掺入了由富钽原子双层稳定化的Cu₃Li析出物,从而阻止了晶粒长大并提高了高温性能。这种合金结合了铜优异的导电性和镍基高温合金的韧性,与钨基合金等现有材料相比,具有优越的性能平衡。 该合金采用粉末冶金和低温铣削工艺制备,并进行了严格的稳定性和耐久性测试,包括10000小时的退火过程。先进的显微镜和计算模型证实了钽双层的稳定作用。美国陆军研究实验室已获得该合金的专利,认可其在换热器、推进系统和高超音速飞行器技术等先进应用中的潜力。未来的研究将集中在测量该合金的热导率和开发类似的高温合金。

利哈伊大学研发出一种新型铜钽锂合金(铜96.5%,钽3%,锂0.5%),该合金表现出类似超级合金的强度(屈服强度约为1000兆帕)。钽通常不溶于铜,但通过形成具有钽壳层的Cu3Li颗粒而被整合到基体中。 虽然其强度不及最好的钢材甚至某些铜铍合金(C17200),但它可以作为昂贵且有害的铜铍合金以及镍/钴基超级合金的潜在替代品。其成本效益、热电性能和易于制造性将决定其多功能性。镍的价格约为铜的两倍,钴的价格是铜的5-6倍,而且钴的生产商存在政治问题。 潜在应用包括热交换器、涡轮机,甚至大电流电连接器,利用铜的导热性和导电性以及增强的强度。其制造工艺看似复杂且昂贵,这可能会影响其经济性。其抗菌性能在其他应用中可能具有价值,例如热水器,但该材料的设计更侧重于高温环境,在这种环境下抗菌性能并不重要。

原文

The ARL and Lehigh researchers collaborated with scientists from Arizona State University and Louisiana State University to develop the alloy, which can withstand extreme heat without significant degradation.

This and other innovative alloys will continue to be studied in Lehigh’s newly outfitted high-tech research labs, the Nanoalloy Lab and Nanoceramics Lab, which include high-pressure torsion systems, nanoindentation equipment and specialized high-temperature furnaces.

Combining Copper with a Complexion-Stabilized Nanostructure

The breakthrough comes from the formation of Cu₃Li precipitates, stabilized by a Ta-rich atomic bilayer complexion, a concept pioneered by the Lehigh researchers. Unlike typical grain boundaries that migrate over time at high temperatures, this complexion acts as a structural stabilizer, maintaining the nanocrystalline structure, preventing grain growth and dramatically improving high-temperature performance.

The alloy holds its shape under extreme, long-term thermal exposure and mechanical stress, resisting deformation even near its melting point, noted Patrick Cantwell, a research scientist at Lehigh University and co-author of the study.

By merging the high-temperature resilience of nickel-based superalloys with copper — which is known for exceptional conductivity — the material paves the way for next-generation applications, including heat exchangers, advanced propulsion systems and thermal management solutions for cutting-edge missile and hypersonic technologies.

A New Class of High-Performance Materials

This new Cu-Ta-Li alloy offers a balance of properties not found in existing materials:

  • Nickel-based superalloys (used in jet engines) are extremely strong but lack the high thermal conductivity of copper alloys.
  • Tungsten-based alloys are highly heat-resistant but dense and difficult to manufacture.
  • This Cu-Ta-Li alloy combines copper’s exceptional heat and electrical conductivity while remaining strong and stable at extreme temperatures.
  • While not a direct replacement for traditional superalloys in ultra-high temperature applications, it has the potential to complement them in next-generation engineering solutions.

How the Researchers Made and Tested It

The team synthesized the alloy using powder metallurgy and high-energy cryogenic milling, ensuring a fine-scale nanostructure. They then subjected it to:

  • 10,000 hours (over a year) of annealing at 800°C, testing its long-term stability.
  • Advanced microscopy techniques, revealing the Cu₃Li precipitate structure.
  • Creep resistance experiments, confirming its durability under extreme conditions.
  • Computational modeling using density functional theory (DFT), which validated the stabilizing role of the Ta bilayer complexion.

Patent, Funding and Future Work

A project such as this takes years of careful work and collaboration, said Christopher Marvel ’12 ’16 Ph.D., an author of the paper and professor of mechanical engineering at Louisiana State University.

“Lehigh has such a strong reputation for electron microscopy, and that is what interested the ARL in working with us on this material. It was our microscopy that was really key to understanding the material,” said Marvel, who helped lead that portion of the research over a six-year period. “The Lehigh faculty have worked on many high-level research projects over the years, and they’ve all taught me different things that I apply now as an academic.”

The ARL was awarded a U.S. patent (US 11,975,385 B2) for the alloy, highlighting its strategic significance, particularly in defense applications like military heat exchangers, propulsion systems and hypersonic vehicles.

The work is just one of many collaborations between Lehigh and ARL which have resulted in significant discoveries, papers in high-profile publications, award-winning poster submissions and the placement of Lehigh students in prestigious fellowships.

Alum Joshua Smeltzer ’17 ’23 Ph.D., now a design engineer at Honeywell, also contributed to the research, performing advanced microstructural characterization of the superalloy using Lehigh's Atomic Resolution Microscope (ARM).

“Lehigh's ARM, a state-of-the-art electron microscope, is a unique instrument that enables scientists to analyze materials on the atomic scale,” Smeltzer said. “In this work, the ARM was used to image the superalloy at the nano- and atomic-scales to provide a mechanistic explanation for the alloy's exceptional performance.”

Further research will include direct measurements of the alloy’s thermal conductivity compared to nickel-based alternatives, work to ready it for potential applications, and the development of other high-temperature alloys following a similar design strategy.

“This project is a great example of how federal investment in fundamental science drives American leadership in materials technology,” Harmer said. “Scientific discoveries such as this are key to strengthening national security and fueling industrial innovation.”

Story by Dan Armstrong

Lehigh has been named an R1 research university by the Carnegie Classification of Institutions of Higher Education. Universities with this designation conduct the highest level of research activity within the Carnegie Classification. Lehigh is the only university in the Lehigh Valley to have this designation, and one of seven in Pennsylvania. Learn more.

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