Medium-Frequency Electrical Resistance Sintering of Oxidized C.P. Iron Powder
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Abstract
Commercially pure (C.P.) iron powders with a deliberate high degree of oxidation were
consolidated by medium-frequency electrical resistance sintering (MF-ERS). This is a consolidation
technique where pressure, and heat coming from a low-voltage and high-intensity electrical current,
are simultaneously applied to a powder mass. In this work, the achieved densification rate is
interpreted according to a qualitative microscopic model, based on the compacts global porosity
and electrical resistance evolution. The effect of current intensity and sintering time on compacts
was studied on the basis of micrographs revealing the porosity distribution inside the sintered
compact. The microstructural characteristics of compacts consolidated by the traditional cold-press
and furnace-sinter powder metallurgy route are compared with results of MF-ERS consolidation.
The goodness of MF-ERS versus the problems of conventional sintering when working with oxidized
powders is analyzed. The electrical consolidation can obtain higher densifications than the traditional
route under non-reducing atmospheres.
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Bibliographic citation
Montes, J., Cuevas, F., Ternero, F., Astacio, R., Caballero, E., Cintas, J. Medium-Frequency Electrical Resistance Sintering of Oxidized C.P. Iron Powder. Metals, 8(6), 426. (2018). DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/met8060426










