powered by CADENAS

Social Share

Ferrouranium (9123 views - Material Database)

Ferrouranium, also called ferro-uranium, is a ferroalloy, an alloy of iron and uranium, after World War II usually depleted uranium.
Go to Article

Ferrouranium

Ferrouranium

Ferrouranium, also called ferro-uranium, is a ferroalloy, an alloy of iron and uranium, after World War II usually depleted uranium.

Composition and properties

The alloy contains about 35–50% uranium and 1.5–4.0% carbon.[1] At least two intermetallic compounds of iron and uranium were identified: U6Fe and UFe2. Small amounts of uranium can drastically lower melting point of iron and vice versa. UFe
2
reportedly melts at 1230 °C, U
6
Fe
at 805 °C; a mixture of these two can have melting point as low as 725 °C, a mixture of iron and UFe
2
can have melting point of 1055 °C.[2] As ferrouranium readily dissolves in mineral acids, its chemical analysis is not problematic.[3]

Use

Ferrouranium is used as a deoxidizer (more powerful than ferrovanadium), for denitrogenizing steel, for forming carbides, and as an alloying element. In ferrous alloys, uranium increases the elastic limit and the tensile strength. In high speed steels, it has been used to increase toughness and strength in amounts between 0.05–5%.[4] Uranium-alloyed steels can be used at very low temperatures; nickel-uranium alloys are resistant to even very aggressive chemicals, including aqua regia.[5]

Economics

The alloys did not prove to be commercially successful in long run.[6] However, during World War I and afterwards, uranium-doped steels were used for tools; large amounts of ferrouranium were produced between 1914–1916.[7]

  1. ^ Chemical Catalog Company (2009). The Condensed Chemical Dictionary. BiblioBazaar. p. 229. ISBN 1-110-76011-6. 
  2. ^ "Corrosion-resistant Fe-Cr-uranium238 pellet and method for making the same - US Patent 4383853 Description". Patentstorm.us. Archived from the original on 2011-06-12. 
  3. ^ Fred Ibbotson (2007). The Chemical Analysis of Steel-Works' Materials. READ BOOKS. p. 216. ISBN 1-4067-8113-4. 
  4. ^ Mel M. Schwartz (2002). Encyclopedia of materials, parts, and finishes. CRC Press. p. 832. ISBN 1-56676-661-3. 
  5. ^ Ian Ellis. "Uranium and Its Professions". Todayinsci.com. 
  6. ^ M. G. Chitkara (1996). Toxic Tibet under nuclear China. APH Publishing. p. 39. ISBN 81-7024-718-7. 
  7. ^ Marshall Cavendish Corporation (2003). How It Works: Science and Technology. Marshall Cavendish. p. 2548. ISBN 0-7614-7314-9. 

AlGaAlnicoAlluminioLeghe di alluminioCupralluminiAl-LiBronzo arsenicaleRame arsenicaleBell metalBerillioBeryllium copperBiglioneBirmabrightBismanolBismutoOttone (lega)BronzoCalamine brassChinese silverCromoChromium hydrideCobaltoColored goldCostantanaRameCopper hydrideCopper–tungstenCorinthian bronzeCrown goldCunifeCupronichelCymbal alloysLega di DevardaDuralluminioDutch metalElettroElinvarFernicoFerrolegaFerroceriumFerrochromeFerromanganeseFerromolybdenumFerrosiliconFerrotitanioField's metalFlorentine bronzeGalfenolGalinstanoGallio (elemento chimico)Gilding metalVetroGlucydurOroGuanín (bronze)GunmetalHepatizonHiduminiumHydronaliumIndioFerroItalmaPiomboMagnaliumMagnesioManganinaMegalliumMelchior (alloy)MercuryMolybdochalkosMuntz metalNichromeNichelAlpaccaOro nordicoOrmoluPhosphor bronzePrincisbeccoMaterie plastichePlexiglasPlutonioPotassioRhoditeRodioRose's metalSamarioScandioShakudōArgentoSodioSpeculum metalAcciaio inossidabileAcciaioStelliteAcciaio strutturaleStagno (elemento chimico)TitanioTombacTumbagaUranioVitalliumWood's metalY alloyZincoZirconioInvarGhisaIron–hydrogen alloyPig ironKanthal (alloy)KovarStaballoySpiegeleisenBulat steelCrucible steel41xx steelAcciaio DamascoMangalloyAcciaio super rapidoMushet steelAcciaio MaragingHigh-strength low-alloy steelReynolds 531Electrical steelAcciaio armonicoAL-6XNCelestriumAlloy 20AISI 316Martensitic stainless steelSanicro 28Acciaio chirurgicoZeron 100Silver steelTool steelAcciaio CortenWootz steelSolderTerneLega tipograficaElektronAmalgamaMagnoxAlumelBrightrayChromelHaynes InternationalInconelMonelNicrosilNisilNitinolMu-metalPermalloySupermalloyNickel hydridePlutonium–gallium alloyNaKMischmetalLitioTerfenol-DPseudo palladiumScandium hydrideSamarium–cobalt magnetArgentium sterling silverBritannia silverDoré bullionGoloidPlatinum sterlingShibuichiArgento sterlingArgento tibetanoTitanium Beta CTitanium alloyIdruro di titanioGum metalTitanium goldNitruro di titanioBabbitt (alloy)Britannia metalPeltroQueen's metalMetallo biancoIdruro di uranioZamakZirconium hydrideIdrogenoElioBoroAzotoOssigenoFluoroMetanoMezzanino (architettura)Atomo

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article "", which is released under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share-Alike License 3.0. There is a list of all authors in Wikipedia

Material Database

database,rohs,reach,compliancy,directory,listing,information,substance,material,restrictions,data sheet,specification