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US1753161A - Pen-point alloy - Google Patents

Pen-point alloy Download PDF

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Publication number
US1753161A
US1753161A US241278A US24127827A US1753161A US 1753161 A US1753161 A US 1753161A US 241278 A US241278 A US 241278A US 24127827 A US24127827 A US 24127827A US 1753161 A US1753161 A US 1753161A
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US
United States
Prior art keywords
alloy
osmium
nickel
tungsten
pen
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US241278A
Inventor
John E Woodward
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Messrs Kastenhuber & Lehrfeld
Original Assignee
Messrs Kastenhuber & Lehrfeld
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Messrs Kastenhuber & Lehrfeld filed Critical Messrs Kastenhuber & Lehrfeld
Priority to US241278A priority Critical patent/US1753161A/en
Priority to US365232A priority patent/US1753162A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US1753161A publication Critical patent/US1753161A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

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    • CCHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
    • C22METALLURGY; FERROUS OR NON-FERROUS ALLOYS; TREATMENT OF ALLOYS OR NON-FERROUS METALS
    • C22CALLOYS
    • C22C5/00Alloys based on noble metals
    • C22C5/04Alloys based on a platinum group metal

Definitions

  • One of the main objects of myinvention is to provide an economical osmium alloy for use as a pen point.
  • Another object of my invention is to provide an economical osmium alloy that is 1 tough, durable and which will take a high polish.
  • Another object of my invention is to provide a base alloy of nickel and tungsten that can be shipped to manufacturers of pen points who can then alloy the base alloy with osmium in the way I shall describe later.
  • Still another object of my invention is to provide an alloy of osmium with tungsten and nickel which will be tough, acid resisting,
  • Still another object of my invention is to provide a pen point made of an alloy osmium, tungsten. nickel and if desired plati- 85 num, which will take a high polish and have durable wearing surface, and be tough, fusible with great difiiculty, be readily capable of soldering or freezing to a gold ni and yet be economical to produce.
  • Toughening metals that have been added heretofore are either of two kinds (a) Metals of the platinum group 6) Base metals such as nickel, cobalt, etc., or any element or combination of elements which can impart the required strength and toughness to the osmium metal.
  • I provide a base alloy that can be shipped'as a sort of intermediate product to pen manufacturers, there to be alloyed with osmium to produce my novel alloy.
  • My process consists then in heating nickel 60 toughening agent or metal to osmium in (M. P. 14.84 C.) and adding thereto 'tungsten (M. P. 3500 C.) as the nickel fuses.
  • the proportions for a given batch ofbase alloy, as I prefer to call this alloy of nickel and tungsten, is 75% of tungsten and 25% of nickel.
  • the base alloy melts at about 1900 C. It exhibits a uniform texture or polishing thus showing that it is free from segregation and is a homogeneous alloy.
  • I can use other metals of the nickel group such as cobalt. I can likewise use other metals of the tungsten group as molybdenum. Altho I have given 80% of osmium as a preferable proportion of that metal, I have found that I can use from 70-85% of osmium and from 30-15% of my base alloy and still get good results.
  • platinum M. P. 1745 C.
  • lVhat I claim is 1.
  • An alloy comprising 80% of osmium; 10% of platinum; and 10% of a base alloy comprising 75 parts of tungsten to 25 parts of nickel.
  • An alloy comprising 085 of osmium; 10% of platinum; and 10% of a base alloy comprising 75 parts of. a metal of the tungsten group and 25 parts of a metal of the nickel group.
  • An alloy comprising 85% of osmium; 10% of platinum; and 5 to 20% of a base alloy comprising parts of. tungsten to 25 parts of nickel.
  • An alloy comprising 70-85% of osmium; 515% of a metal of the platinum group other than osmium; and 520% of a base alloy comprising 65-85 parts of a metal of'the tungsten group to 1535 parts of a metal of the nickel group.
  • the osmium alloy need not be formed immediately after the nickel-tungsten alloy. After the base alloy has been formed, I can chill it, and ship it to pen manufacturers. In other words I thus provide a basic material or intermediate as a new composition of matter. Altho, this material may not be of much osmium in the proportions described above-

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  • Chemical & Material Sciences (AREA)
  • Engineering & Computer Science (AREA)
  • Materials Engineering (AREA)
  • Mechanical Engineering (AREA)
  • Metallurgy (AREA)
  • Organic Chemistry (AREA)
  • Adornments (AREA)

Description

Patented Apr. 1, 1930 -iiN1T1 :'o s'rAras:
PPATENTOFFICE JOHN E. WOODWARD, OF BROOKLYN, NEW YORK, ASSIGINOR TO MESSRS; KASTENHU- BER & LEHRFELD, OF, NEW YORK, N. Y.,
A PARTNERSHIP CONSISTING OF CHARLES F. KASTENHUBER, WILLIAM F. LEHRFELD, AND HUGO R. LEHRFELD PEN-POINT ALLOY No Drawing.
5 One of the main objects of myinvention is to provide an economical osmium alloy for use as a pen point.
Another object of my invention is to provide an economical osmium alloy that is 1 tough, durable and which will take a high polish.
Another object of my invention is to provide a base alloy of nickel and tungsten that can be shipped to manufacturers of pen points who can then alloy the base alloy with osmium in the way I shall describe later.
Still another object of my invention is to provide an alloy of osmium with tungsten and nickel which will be tough, acid resisting,
have a durable wearing surface, take a high polish and be economical to produce.
And still another object of my invention is to provide a pen point made of an alloy osmium, tungsten. nickel and if desired plati- 85 num, which will take a high polish and have durable wearing surface, and be tough, fusible with great difiiculty, be readily capable of soldering or freezing to a gold ni and yet be economical to produce.
Still other objects of my invention will ap pear as the description proceeds; and while herein details of the invention are described and claimed, the invention is not limited to these.
36 It is a well known fact in the art of making 40 of osmium present therein. Osmium in the pure state is incapable of use in the above respect. It is too brittle and friable. fusion, and upon cracking or crushing, a pure .osmium button (or even the native osmiridium button) powders readily. This results in a very serious loss since these metals are rare and. precious,-and much of the powder gets lost.
It is therefore necessary to add a so-called After Application filed December 19, 1927. Serial No. 241,278.
order to give it the strength required'for practicable and economical commercial fuse. Toughening metals that have been added heretofore are either of two kinds (a) Metals of the platinum group 6) Base metals such as nickel, cobalt, etc., or any element or combination of elements which can impart the required strength and toughness to the osmium metal.
The objection to the use of the platinum metals other than osmium by themselves is that they are comparatively soft, and therefore reduce the hardness of the resultant alloy with osmium. The objection to the use of the base metals alone is that they do not form true solutions or alloyswith osmium. Thus upon cooling, segregation takes place and the resultant alloy is not of a homogeneous texture'. Consequently a high polished surface 0d of producing the same which will over- 7 come all the above obstacles. I have discovered a method of introducing a toughening alloy into the osmium metal whereby a perfectly homogeneous alloy is produced and what is mostimportant very little of the hardness of the osmium is lost.
I have found that altho the metal tungsten when melted with osmium does not form a true solution, yet if the tungsten be first dissolved in nickel. an alloy results which will form with osmium atrue solution and alloy. that will impart to osmium the desired toughness, homogeneous texture and durable wearing surface.
In fact a dual advantage is accomplished by my newly discovered process. It will be observed that I substitute a larger percentage of base metals for rare or semi-rare metals heretofore utilized in this art, and yet I am able to equal any of the characteristics of the expensive rare metal alloys.
It will further be noted that I provide a base alloy that can be shipped'as a sort of intermediate product to pen manufacturers, there to be alloyed with osmium to produce my novel alloy.
My process consists then in heating nickel 60 toughening agent or metal to osmium in (M. P. 14.84 C.) and adding thereto 'tungsten (M. P. 3500 C.) as the nickel fuses. The proportions for a given batch ofbase alloy, as I prefer to call this alloy of nickel and tungsten, is 75% of tungsten and 25% of nickel. At about 1900" C. it was found that a true solution took place. That is to say the base alloy melts at about 1900 C. It exhibits a uniform texture or polishing thus showing that it is free from segregation and is a homogeneous alloy. p
I then may chill the tungsten-nickel solution, or I may add the osmium metal. I use 80% of osmium (M. P. 2400 C.) and 20% of the base alloy for a given batch of my final alloy. I'find that at 2400 C.a true solution of osmium, tungsten and nickel results. The resulting alloy at this point, upon chilling, has a uniform homogeneous texture and takes a very high polish.
I can use other metals of the nickel group such as cobalt. I can likewise use other metals of the tungsten group as molybdenum. Altho I have given 80% of osmium as a preferable proportion of that metal, I have found that I can use from 70-85% of osmium and from 30-15% of my base alloy and still get good results.
To utilize my alloy a button of it is stamped, cracked or crushed to obtain pieces for freezing on to gold nibs and finishing as pen points and similar wearing surfaces.-
, I find that my alloy does not powder when crushed. I get an alloy which hangs together when crushed and does not powder. I get particles suitable for polishing and working. I, then, greatly reduce the loss due to powdering and yet use inexpensive materials. The texture is uniform and homogeneous and the surface of the pen point takes on a very high polish thus resulting in a smoothly writing point.
I desire to point out that platinum (M. P. 1745 C.) may be added to increase the toughness.
If so desired then it is added before a finished product is obtained that can then be used in the manner I have outlined above.
So also .I am not limiting myself to the temperatures mentioned above. I include within the scope of the appended claims any range of temperatures which will produce my novel alloy.
lVhat I claim is 1. An alloy comprising 80% of osmium; 10% of platinum; and 10% of a base alloy comprising 75 parts of tungsten to 25 parts of nickel.
2. An alloy comprising 085 of osmium; 10% of platinum; and 10% of a base alloy comprising 75 parts of. a metal of the tungsten group and 25 parts of a metal of the nickel group.
3. An alloy comprising 85% of osmium; 10% of platinum; and 5 to 20% of a base alloy comprising parts of. tungsten to 25 parts of nickel.
1. An alloy comprising 70-85% of osmium; 515% of a metal of the platinum group other than osmium; and 520% of a base alloy comprising 65-85 parts of a metal of'the tungsten group to 1535 parts of a metal of the nickel group.
5. An alloy comprising 545% of a metal the osmium is dissolved in the tungstennickel alloy in the proportion of 10%. Then 80% of. osmium is added. The base alloy would be present to the amount of 10%.
The characteristics of this alloy with added platinum are still preserved if the ranges of percentages of the ingredients of the final alloy do not exceed the following:
5-15% of tungsten;
1-5% of nickel;
515% of platinum; and
70-85% of osmium.
The osmium alloy need not be formed immediately after the nickel-tungsten alloy. After the base alloy has been formed, I can chill it, and ship it to pen manufacturers. In other words I thus provide a basic material or intermediate as a new composition of matter. Altho, this material may not be of much osmium in the proportions described above-
US241278A 1927-12-19 1927-12-19 Pen-point alloy Expired - Lifetime US1753161A (en)

Priority Applications (2)

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US241278A US1753161A (en) 1927-12-19 1927-12-19 Pen-point alloy
US365232A US1753162A (en) 1927-12-19 1929-05-22 Alloy

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Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3276113A (en) * 1963-06-27 1966-10-04 Arthur G Metcalfe Method of brazing tungsten

Cited By (1)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US3276113A (en) * 1963-06-27 1966-10-04 Arthur G Metcalfe Method of brazing tungsten

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