High-strength titanium alloy member and production method for same
10151019 ยท 2018-12-11
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C22C47/14
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B22F3/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F1/145
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B22F1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/24
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22C47/14
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C22F1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A production method for a titanium alloy member includes preparing a titanium alloy material for sintering as a raw material of a sintered body; nitriding the titanium alloy material for sintering, thereby forming a nitrogen compound layer and/or a nitrogen solid solution layer in a surface layer of the titanium alloy material for sintering and yielding a nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material for sintering; mixing the titanium alloy material for sintering and the nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material for sintering, thereby yielding a titanium alloy material for sintering mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material; sintering the titanium alloy material for sintering mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material, thereby bonding the material each other and dispersing nitrogen contained in the nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material for sintering in a condition in which nitrogen is uniformly dispersed into an entire inner portion of the sintered body by solid solution.
Claims
1. A titanium alloy member comprising: a fine acicular structure; and 0.054 to 0.093 mass % of nitrogen contained in solid solution, wherein the fine acicular structure includes acicular crystals having a thickness of 5 m or less, the fine acicular structure consists of a phase of which an area ratio is 0.1 to 1.0%, the balance being only phase, and the alloy member has a bending strength of 2286 to 2318 MPa in a three-point bending test.
2. The titanium alloy member according to claim 1, wherein the alloy member is yielded from a titanium alloy selected from Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-3Al-2.5V, Ti-4Al-3Mo-1V, Ti-5Al-2Cr-1Fe, Ti-5Al-1.5Fe-1.5Cr-1.5Mo, Ti-6Al-Nb-1Ta-1Mo, Ti-8Al-1Mo-1V, Ti-8Al-4Co, Ti-6Al-2Xn-4Zr-2Mo, Ti-6Al-6V-2Sn, and Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo.
3. The titanium alloy member according to claim 1, containing no TiN phase.
4. A production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 1, the method comprising: preparing a titanium alloy material; separating a portion of the titanium alloy material and nitriding the portion, thereby forming at least a nitrogen solid solution layer in a surface layer of the portion, thereby yielding a nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material; mixing the titanium alloy material and the nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material, thereby yielding a titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material; sintering the titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material, thereby bonding the materials together and dispersing nitrogen contained in the nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material and forming a sintered body in a condition in which nitrogen is uniformly dispersed into an entire inner portion of the sintered body by solid solution, and subjecting the sintered body to solution heat treatment and annealing treatment in this order, thereby obtaining a titanium alloy member having a fine acicular structure.
5. The production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 4, wherein the titanium alloy material for sintering is titanium alloy fiber obtained by a molten metal extraction method.
6. The production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 4, wherein the solution heat treatment is performed at a temperature within 100 C. from a transus temperature, and the annealing treatment is performed in a temperature range of 450 to 750 C.
7. The production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 4, wherein the titanium alloy member after the solution heat treatment has a martensitic structure.
8. The production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 4, wherein the titanium alloy member after the solution heat treatment mainly has a structure of an phase (hexagonal martensitic crystal) as a main structure.
9. The production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 4, wherein the sintering is performed by hot pressing.
10. The production method for a titanium alloy member according to claim 9, wherein the hot pressing is performed in a temperature range of 900 to 1300 C.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1)
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
EMBODIMENT OF THE INVENTION
(7) Powders, thin strips, thin pieces, and fibers may be used as a titanium alloy material for sintering. Among these forms, a thin strip, a thin piece, and a fiber are preferable since these forms are suitable for handling while considering safety and operation efficiency compared to a powder. These forms can easily be the same size, whereby control in nitriding can be easy. That is, a thin strip, a thin piece, and a fiber are preferable since the amount of nitrogen can be easily controlled. Among these forms, fibers that are obtained by production methods for woven cloth and unwoven cloth are more preferable since a titanium alloy material for sintering and a nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material for sintering can be uniformly mixed. That is, nitrogen can be easily dispersed uniformly overall. Specifically, titanium alloy fibers obtained by a molten metal extraction method are most preferable since the fiber has superior cleanliness.
(8) Sintering may preferably performed by HP (Hot Press), HIP (Hot Isostatic Press), SPS (Spark Plasma Sintering) which have a compressing mechanism and enable sintering in vacuum or inert gas atmosphere. By heating at a sintering temperature and compressing the titanium alloy material for sintering mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material, a high-strength titanium alloy member in which few pores exist can be obtained.
(9) The solution heat treatment in the present invention is a treatment in which the material is heated to a temperature proximate to the transus temperature, and is rapidly cooled by a cooling medium. The heating temperature for an - type titanium alloy is preferably within 100 C. from the transus temperature. By this treatment, a fine acicular structure mainly composed of phase (hexagonal martensitic crystal) is obtained. When the heating temperature exceeds 100 C. from the transus temperature, phase may be coarse in heating, thereby precipitating coarse phase at grain boundaries after cooling. As a result, ductility of the member is greatly reduced. When the heating temperature is lower than 100 C. from the transus temperature, transformation of an phase into a phase in heating is insufficient, whereby a large amount of coarse phase is remained and required strength is not obtained.
(10) The annealing treatment in the present invention performed after the solution heat treatment is a treatment in which supersaturated solid solutions such as an phase which is hard, brittle, and thermally unstable are suitably recovered and resolved, whereby the structure is thermally stable and mechanical properties are improved by fine precipitated phases. The heating temperature in an - type titanium alloy is preferably 450 to 750 C. By this treatment, a fine phase is precipitated in the residual phase and the phase is resolved into fine phase and phase, whereby the member is thermally stable and ductility is improved. When the heating temperature is less than 450 C., the structure is not easily resolved. When the heating temperature is more than 750 C., the structure is thermally stable, but the grain is coarse. It should be noted that the structure after the solution heat treatment is not thermally stable, but the structure is fine and strengthened by nitrogen solid solution, whereby the strength is sufficiently high compared to members composed of a plate-like structure before solution heat treatment and aging (precipitating) hardened type titanium alloy members. Therefore, if thermal stability is negligible in practical use, the annealing treatment can be omitted.
(11) The fine acicular structure preferably includes an acicular crystal of which a thickness is 5 m or less. By forming such a fine acicular structure, the member has high strength due to the fine crystal grain and high resistance to extension of cracks due to the acicular structure, and fatigue strength is sufficiently improved.
(12) The fine acicular structure preferably includes a phase of which an area ratio is 1.0% or less. Since the phase is low in strength, the member has further high strength and high fatigue strength by limiting the area ratio of the phase to 1.0% or less.
(13) The raw material for the high-strength titanium alloy member of the present invention is preferably widely used - type titanium alloy, and Ti-6Al-4V, Ti-3Al-2.5V, Ti-4Al-3Mo-1V, Ti-5Al-2Cr-1Fe, Ti-5Al-1.5Fe-1.5Cr-1.5Mo, Ti-6Al-2Nb-1Ta-1Mo, Ti-8Al-1Mo-1V, Ti-8Al-4Co, Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-2Mo, Ti-6Al-6V-2Sn, and Ti-6Al-2Sn-4Zr-6Mo are exemplified.
(14) The high-strength titanium alloy member of the present invention can be applied to aircraft parts and automobile parts in which light weight is required, specifically, the member is suitable for parts in which strength is required. Titanium alloys are superior in biocompatibility and can be used as a material for bioimplant devices. Specifically, the alloys are suitable for devices that are required to have strength since the effect of lightness of weight is great.
(15) Production method of the high-strength titanium alloy member of the present invention will be explained in detail hereinafter.
(16) 1. Step for Forming Fiber
(17)
(18) The apparatus 100 is a production apparatus for metallic fiber using a molten metal extraction method. In the apparatus 100 using a molten metal extraction method, an upper end portion of a rod-shaped raw material M is melted, and a molten metal Ma contacts the circumferential portion 141a of the rotating disk 141, a portion of the molten metal Ma is extracted toward the direction of the substantially tangential line of the circumference of the disk 141, and is rapidly cooled, thereby forming a titanium alloy fiber F. For example, a titanium alloy such as Ti-6Al-4V is used as a raw material M, and a titanium alloy fiber F having a diameter of 10 to 200 m is produced. The diameter of the titanium alloy fiber F is not limited, and the diameter is selected according to the amount of nitrogen that should be contained in the titanium alloy member. For example, if a large amount of nitrogen should be contained, the diameter of the titanium alloy fiber F may be thin. In this case, the proportion of a nitrogen compound layer and/or a nitrogen solid solution layer which are formed by the nitriding can be increased with respect to the diameter.
(19) As shown in
(20) An inert gas such as argon gas is provided in the chamber 101 as an atmosphere gas, thereby inhibiting reaction of impurities such as oxygen included in an atmosphere gas and a molten material Ma. The raw material feeding portion 110 is located at the bottom of the chamber 101, feeds the raw material M toward the direction of the arrow B at predetermined speed, and provides the raw material M to the raw material holding portion 120. The raw material holding portion 120 prevents movement of the molten material Ma toward a radial direction thereof and guides the raw material M toward a suitable position of the disk rotating portion 140.
(21) The raw material holding portion 120 is a water cooled tubular member made from a metal and is located between the raw material feeding portion 110 and the metallic fiber-forming portion 140 and below the disk 141. The heating portion 130 is a high-frequency induction coil which generates magnetic flux for melting the upper portion of the raw material M and forming the molten material Ma. As a material for the raw material holding portion 120, a material that has high thermal conductivity for cooling effect by a cooling water and is not magnetic to avoid effects of generating magnetic flux is preferable. Copper or a copper alloy is preferable as a material for the raw material holding portion 120 for practical use.
(22) The disk rotating portion 140 produces a titanium alloy fiber F from the molten material Ma by the disk 141 which rotates around a rotating shaft 142. The disk 141 is made from copper or a copper alloy having high thermal conductivity. As shown in
(23) The temperature measuring portion 150 measures the temperature of the molten material Ma. The high-frequency generating portion 160 provides high-frequency current to the heating portion 130. The power of the high-frequency generating portion 160 is controlled based on the temperature of the molten material Ma which is measured by the temperature measuring portion 150, and the temperature of the molten material Ma is maintained to be constant. The metallic fiber receiving portion 170 receives the metallic fiber F which is formed by the metallic fiber fainting portion 140.
(24) In the above apparatus, the raw material feeding portion 110 continually feeds the raw material M in a direction of the arrow B, thereby supplying it to the raw material holding portion 120. The heating portion 130 melts the upper portion of the raw material M by induction heating, thereby forming the molten material Ma. Then, the molten material Ma is continually fed to the circumference 141a of the disk 141 rotating in the direction of the arrow A, the molten material Ma contacts the circumference 141a of the disk 141, a part thereof is extracted toward a direction of an approximate tangential line of the circle of the disk 141 and is rapidly cooled, thereby forming a titanium alloy fiber (titanium alloy material for sintering) F. The formed titanium alloy fiber F extends toward the direction of an approximate tangential line of the circle of the disk 141 and received by the metallic fiber receiving portion 170 which is located in the direction in which the fiber F extends.
(25) 2. Nitriding Step
(26) As an embodiment of a nitriding step, an aggregate of the titanium alloy fiber F produced by the above process is carried into a vacuum furnace, which is evacuated and supplied with a nitrogen gas, and the fiber F is heated. In this case, an inert gas such as argon gas may be supplied with nitrogen gas for adjusting the density and the pressure of the nitrogen gas. The pressure and the temperature in the furnace and processing time are suitably selected according to amount of nitrogen which should be contained in a titanium alloy member. If the temperature of the furnace is too low, a very long time is required to form a nitrogen compound layer and/or a nitrogen solid solution layer. If the temperature of the furnace is too high, control of the processing time is difficult since reaction speed is high, and a thick nitrogen compound layer is readily formed. The thick nitrogen compound layer requires a very long time for dispersing nitrogen in following sintering step. Therefore, the temperature in the furnace is preferably 600 to 1000 C. for practical production. By the nitriding step, a nitrogen-containing titanium alloy fiber (nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material for sintering) G in which a very thin TiN compound layer and/or nitrogen solid solution layer is formed on the titanium alloy fiber F is produced.
(27) 3. Mixing Step
(28) The nitrogen-containing titanium alloy fiber G including nitrogen by the above manner and the titanium alloy fiber F which does not contain nitrogen are mixed with predetermined percentage according to required nitrogen amount. As a mixing apparatus, a fiberizing apparatus shown in
(29) 4. Sintering Step
(30) In a vacuum HP apparatus, a heating chamber is disposed in a vacuum vessel, a mold is disposed in the heating chamber, a cylinder is disposed in the upper portion of the vacuum vessel, a press ram projected from the cylinder is vertically movable in the heating chamber, and an upper punch installed at the press ram is inserted into the mold. The fiber aggregation of titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material W is charged into the mold of the HP apparatus constructed as above, the vacuum vessel is evacuated or purged with an inert gas, and the heating chamber is heated to a predetermined sintering temperature. Then, the fiber aggregation of titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material W is compressed by the upper punch inserted into the mold, and is sintered.
(31) The sintering should be performed in a vacuum or an inert gas atmosphere to avoid contamination by impurities such as oxygen from the atmosphere into a titanium alloy member. The sintering temperature is preferably 900 C. or more, the sintering time is preferably 30 minutes or more, the pressure of press is preferably 10 MPa or more. By the sintering step, the fiber aggregation of titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material W may be a densified titanium alloy member in which few pores exist. Nitrogen contained in the nitrogen-containing titanium alloy fiber G is uniformly dispersed into the titanium alloy member in solid solution overall, and nitrogen compound is not contained. In this case, the structure without a nitrogen compound is a plate-like structure.
(32) 5. Solution Heat Treatment and Annealing Treatment
(33) Solution heat treatment and annealing treatment can be performed in a typical heating furnace in air. In solution heat treatment, the material is preferably rapidly cooled by a cooling medium such as water and oil after heating. In annealing treatment, cooling conditions after heating are not limited, and natural cooling or air stream cooling is typically performed.
EXAMPLES
(34) 1. Production of Samples
(35) The present invention will be explained in detail by way of specific examples. A titanium alloy fiber of which average diameter was 60 m was produced from Ti-6Al-4V (corresponding to ASTM B348 Gr. 5) as a raw material using the apparatus 100.
(36) A part of the titanium alloy fiber was subjected to nitriding. In the nitriding, the titanium alloy fiber was carried into a vacuum furnace. After evacuating, a nitrogen gas was fed into the vacuum furnace, and the pressure in the furnace was set at 600 Torr. Then, the temperature in the furnace was increased to 800 C. and maintained for 1.5 hours.
(37) The nitrogen-containing titanium alloy fiber that was subjected to nitriding such as above and the titanium alloy fiber that did not contain nitride were supplied to the fiberizing apparatus shown in
(38) The fiber aggregation of titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material was charged into a mold made from carbon, and was sintered in a vacuum HP apparatus, thereby obtaining a titanium alloy member having 10 mm thickness (Samples Nos. 101 to 214). In the sintering, the degree of vacuum was 110.sup.4 Torr or less, the temperature was increased to a predetermined sintering temperature at a heating rate of 10 C./minute, and then the sample was compressed at a pressure of 40 MPa for 1.5 hours, which may have been a sufficient pressure and maintaining time for forming a further densified body. Cooling after sintering was performed in the furnace. The mold made from carbon and the fiber aggregation of titanium alloy material mixed with nitrogen-containing titanium alloy material as well as the titanium alloy member which is a sintered body of the fiber are reactive under the high temperature conditions of the examples. Therefore, a release plate as a liner made from alumina (purity of 99.5% or more) was installed to the carbon mold. However, in Samples Nos. 114 and 214 in which the sintering temperature was 1400 C., since the titanium alloy member after sintering and the release plate were completely bonded together, a sample for evaluation could not be selected. Therefore, Samples Nos. 114 and 214 were not evaluated.
(39) A part of the titanium alloy member was subjected to solution heat treatment and annealing treatment in this order as a heat treatment. In the solution heat treatment, the titanium alloy material was heated to 1040 C. and maintained for 2 hours, and then it was cooled in iced water. In the annealing treatment, the titanium alloy material was heated to 550 C. and maintained for 2 hours, and then it was cooled by air (these treatments are referred as heat treatment hereinafter, unless it is explicitly stated otherwise). It is shown in Table 1 whether the heat treatment was performed or not with respect to Samples Nos. 101 to 113 and Samples Nos. 201 to 213.
(40) For comparison, an expanded material of Ti-6Al-4V (corresponding to ASTM B348 Gr. 5) was prepared, a part of which was subjected to the heat treatment with the same condition. The sample is shown together as Comparative Examples Nos. 1 and 2 in Table 1.
(41) TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Sintering Wf temperature Sample (%) ( C.) Heat treatment No. 101 5 1100 Not done No. 102 10 1100 Not done No. 103 15 1100 Not done No. 104 20 1100 Not done No. 105 25 1100 Not done No. 106 30 1100 Not done No. 107 35 1100 Not done No. 108 40 1100 Not done No. 109 20 800 Not done No. 110 20 900 Not done No. 111 20 1000 Not done No. 112 20 1200 Not done No. 113 20 1300 Not done No. 114 20 1400 No. 201 5 1100 Done No. 202 10 1100 Done No. 203 15 1100 Done No. 204 20 1100 Done No. 205 25 1100 Done No. 206 30 1100 Done No. 207 35 1100 Done No. 208 40 1100 Done No. 209 20 800 Done No. 210 20 900 Done No. 211 20 1000 Done No. 212 20 1200 Done No. 213 20 1300 Done No. 214 20 1400 Comparative sample Not done No.1 Comparative sample No.2 Done
2. Observation and Measuring Method
(1) Observation of Structure
(42) The samples were cut to a suitable size and embedded in a resin, mirror finished by mechanical polishing, etched by an etching fluid (2 wt % of hydrofluoric acid and 4 wt % of nitric acid), and structure was observed by an optical microscope (apparatus: NIKON ME 600).
(43) (2) Amount of Nitrogen (N Amount)
(44) Amount of nitrogen was measured by inert gas melting-thermal conductivity technique and solid state type infrared absorption method (apparatus: LOCO TC600).
(45) (3) Existence of TiN Compound (TiN Phase)
(46) Peak of TiN compound was observed by an X-ray diffractometer (apparatus: Rigaku X-ray DIIFFRACTOMETER RINT2000) using Cu tube target.
(47) (4) Area Ratio of Phase ( Phase Ratio)
(48) phase ratio was analyzed and calculated by FESEM/EBSD method (apparatus: JEOL JSM-7000F, TSL solutions OIM-Analysis Ver. 4.6) with 3000-power magnification.
(49) (5) Hardness (HV)
(50) Hardness of the surface and the center of samples were measured by a Vickers hardness tester (apparatus: FUTURE-TECH FM-600). The test load was 10 gf. The surface hardness was measured at 0.5 mm 10 points below the surface in the thickness direction and the center hardness was measured at the center 10 points in the thickness direction, and the average was calculated.
(51) (6) Three-Point Bending Strength (.sub.b)
(52) 300 kN universal testing machine was used (apparatus: INSTRON 5586 type). The dimensions of the test piece were width: 6 mm, length: 17 mm, thickness: 1 mm, and the distance between fulcrums was 15 mm. The test speed was 6 mm/minutes, and the average of three measured values was calculated. The results of the structure observation, the analysis, and the test are shown in Table 2. The relationship between the nitrogen amount and the hardness is shown in
(53) TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Sintering N Rate of Wf temperature Heat amount phase HV .sub.b Sample (%) ( C.) treatment Structure (mass %) TiN phase (%) Surface Center (MPa) No. 101 5 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.022 Not 6.5 375 374 1935 structure recognized No. 102 10 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.034 Not 5.2 381 382 1998 structure recognized No. 103 15 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.055 Not 6.8 392 390 2055 structure recognized No. 104 20 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.073 Not 6.9 409 408 2050 structure recognized No. 105 25 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.089 Not 7.0 416 418 2010 structure recognized No. 106 30 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.105 Not 6.6 425 423 1850 structure recognized No. 107 35 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.122 Not 6.8 432 435 1700 structure recognized No. 108 40 1100 Not done Plate-like 0.138 Not 6.9 440 441 1550 structure recognized No. 109 20 800 Not done Plate-like 0.076 Not 6.2 401 403 1706 structure recognized No. 110 20 900 Not done Plate-like 0.080 Not 5.7 396 408 1882 structure recognized No. 111 20 1000 Not done Plate-like 0.070 Not 5.9 415 412 2007 structure recognized No. 112 20 1200 Not done Plate-like 0.078 Not 7.2 398 406 2067 structure recognized No. 113 20 1300 Not done Plate-like 0.081 Not 5.9 398 402 2055 structure recognized No. 201 5 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.023 Not 0.3 402 400 2120 structure recognized No. 202 10 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.039 Not 0.2 421 420 2200 structure recognized No. 203 15 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.054 Not 0.1 426 425 2298 structure recognized No. 204 20 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.078 Not 0.2 431 428 2296 structure recognized No. 205 25 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.093 Not 0.4 435 437 2286 structure recognized No. 206 30 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.103 Not 0.7 441 442 2090 structure recognized No. 207 35 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.121 Not 0.5 453 457 1825 structure recognized No. 208 40 1100 Done Fine acicular 0.135 Not 0.6 463 460 1688 structure recognized No. 209 20 800 Done Fine acicular 0.076 Not 0.1 435 435 1666 structure recognized No. 210 20 900 Done Fine acicular 0.075 Not 0.1 428 433 2103 structure recognized No. 211 20 1000 Done Fine acicular 0.076 Not 0.4 430 428 2316 structure recognized No. 212 20 1200 Done Fine acicular 0.073 Not 0.2 422 426 2318 structure recognized No. 213 20 1300 Done Fine acicular 0.076 Not 0.3 432 427 2308 structure recognized Comparative sample Not done Equiaxed 0.006 Not 5.1 305 303 1850 No. 1 structure recognized Comparative sample Done Fine acicular 0.007 Not 0.3 385 387 1939 No. 2 structure recognized
3. Evaluation
(54) Samples Nos. 101 to 113 were sintered without heat treatment, whereby the structures thereof were plate-like structures as shown in
(55) In Sample Nos. 201 to 213, the structures were acicular structures as shown in
(56) As shown in Table 2, in Samples Nos. 101 to 113 and Samples Nos. 201 to 213, the hardness of the surface portion was the same as the hardness of the center portion, and the hardness was greatly increased compared to that of Comparative Samples Nos. 1 and 2. Therefore, in order to obtain high-strength overall toward the inner portion of a titanium alloy member, it is preferable to apply the method of the present invention.
(57) According to the result of the x-ray diffraction test, peaks of nitrogen compounds such as TiN compound were not found. That is, it was confirmed that the contained nitrogen was not used for forming nitrogen compounds, but was used for solid solution formation.
(58) According to the result of analysis of the electron backscatter diffraction pattern method, the area ratio of the phase in Samples Nos. 101 to 113 was 5.2 to 7.2%. The area ratio of the phase in Samples Nos. 201 to 213 was 0.1 to 0.7%. In Samples Nos. 201 to 213 which had an acicular structure, the strength was greatly increased since area ratio of the phase was small compared to that of Samples Nos. 101 to 113 which had a plate-like structure. The area ratio of the phase is preferably less than 1%.
(59) Next, the relationship between amount of nitrogen and the maximum three-point bending stress will be validated referring to
(60) In Sample No. 201 which contained 0.023 mass % of nitrogen, the maximum three-point bending stress was very high compared to that of Comparative Sample 2. The maximum three-point bending stress increased as the amount of nitrogen increased. However, in Sample No. 207 which contained 0.121 mass % of nitrogen, the material was embrittled due to reduction of ductility, the maximum three-point bending stress was lower than that of Comparative Sample No. 2. In the cases in which nitrogen was further contained, the maximum three-point bending stress further decreased due to further embrittlement. When the amount of nitrogen was less than 0.023 mass %, the effect of highly strengthening with respect to Comparative Sample No. 2 was not sufficient. Therefore, in the titanium alloy member having a fine acicular structure, 0.02 to 0.12 mass % of nitrogen is preferably contained in solid solution for it to have very high strengthening.
(61)
(62) In Sample No. 209 in which the sintering temperature was 800 C. and the heat treatment was followed, even though the amount of nitrogen was 0.076 mass %, the maximum three-point bending stress was lower than that of Comparative Sample No. 2. The reason is that a large number of pores remained and progress of the sintering at the bonding portions of the fibers was insufficient as well as in Sample No. 109. In Sample No. 210 in which the sintering temperature was 900 C. and the heat treatment followed, the maximum three-point bending stress was much higher than that of Comparative Sample No. 2. In Samples Nos. 211 to 213 in which the sintering temperature was 1000 C. or more and the heat treatment followed, pores hardly remained and progress of the sintering at the bonding portions of the fibers was sufficient, whereby high maximum three-point bending stress was stably obtained. Therefore, in the titanium alloy member having the fine acicular structure, the sintering temperature is preferably is at least 900 C., and more preferably, is 1000 to 1300 C., to provide very high strengthening.
INDUSTRIAL APPLICABILITY
(63) The high-strength titanium alloy material of the present invention is applicable for materials used for aircrafts and automobiles required to have light weight and high strength and materials for bioimplant devices.