Sintered Iron-Copper and Iron-Nickel
This family includes iron-based sintered materials with copper or nickel additions, with or without carbon. It is intended for structural parts with medium to high strength, offering a better mechanical balance than simple iron and carbon steel grades.
A stronger mechanical compromise
Iron-copper and iron-nickel grades are used when sintered parts must go beyond the capabilities of simple iron grades: higher strength, improved wear resistance, increased hardness or better suitability for heat treatment.
- Medium-strength structural parts
- Gears, cams, levers, supports and transmission components
- Parts requiring improved wear resistance
- Applications suitable for heat treatment depending on the required performance level
Copper strengthens, nickel hardens and toughens
Copper increases strength, hardness and wear resistance. Nickel improves toughness, mechanical properties and hardenability. The choice depends on the load level, machining requirements, target density and the economic interest of additional treatment.
Application areas
This overview summarizes the typical industrial applications of iron-copper, copper-steel, iron-nickel and nickel-steel grades, with a focus on material selection and production cost efficiency.
| Family | Typical applications | Main advantage |
|---|---|---|
| Low-copper iron | Standard structural parts, supports, hubs, bushings, connecting parts | Cost-effective strengthening through copper addition without greatly increasing material complexity |
| Copper steel with carbon | Gears, cams, levers, transmission or motion components | Better balance of strength, hardness and wear resistance than simple carbon steels |
| High-copper iron | Parts subjected to friction or wear when heat treatment is not desired | Improved wear resistance through higher copper content |
| Iron-nickel and nickel steel | Structural parts requiring strength, impact resistance and post-treatment performance | Improved toughness, better hardenability and superior mechanical properties |
Indicative mechanical properties
The ranges below summarize typical values for iron-copper and iron-nickel families in SI units. They are intended to guide the preliminary design phase; final validation depends on geometry, density, carbon content, treatment and manufacturing constraints.
| Material family | Typical density | Apparent hardness | Tensile strength |
|---|---|---|---|
| Low-copper iron | 6.0 – 6.9 g/cm³ | 60 HRF – 36 HRB | 170 – 230 MPa |
| Medium-copper steel | 6.0 – 7.1 g/cm³ | 37 – 72 HRB | 240 – 410 MPa |
| High-copper iron | 5.9 – 6.8 g/cm³ | 60 – 80 HRB | 400 – 570 MPa |
| Heat-treated copper steel | 6.2 – 7.0 g/cm³ | 99 HRB – 36 HRC | 480 – 690 MPa |
| Sintered iron-nickel | 6.6 – 7.2 g/cm³ | 44 HRB – 69 HRB | 280 – 410 MPa |
| Heat-treated nickel steel | 6.6 – 7.2 g/cm³ | 23 – 36 HRC | 620 – 1100 MPa |
Economic approach to material selection
These grades increase performance without immediately moving to more expensive alloys. The right choice depends on the truly required performance level and the cost of secondary operations.
| Industrial requirement | Material orientation | Compromise to monitor |
|---|---|---|
| Improve an iron or carbon steel part | Low-copper iron | Cost-effective mechanical improvement, but performance remains limited by density |
| Achieve higher hardness and strength | Copper steel with carbon | Better properties, but machinability must be monitored as carbon increases |
| Avoid or limit heat treatment | Higher-copper iron | Good wear resistance, but selection must consider material cost and porosity |
| Strength, impact resistance and heat treatment capability | Iron-nickel or nickel steel | Higher performance, higher material cost and more critical treatment process |
Design considerations
For iron-copper and iron-nickel families, it is necessary to balance strength improvement, hardness, wear resistance, possible machining operations and the cost of additional treatments. Density level remains a key parameter in achieving the targeted properties.
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