Evaluation of low cost titanium alloy products

John E. Barnes, William Peter, Craig A. Blue

Research output: Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceedingConference contributionpeer-review

44 Scopus citations

Abstract

Titanium has extremely attractive properties for air vehicles ranging from excellent corrosion resistance to good compatibility with graphite reinforced composites and very good damage tolerance characteristics. At current Buy to Fly ratios, the F-35 Program will consume as much as seven million pounds of titanium a year at rate production. This figure is nearly double that of the F-22 Program, which has a much higher titanium content. Lockheed Martin has initiated "Project Black Ti" to reduce the cost of titanium parts by reducing the titanium consumption but not the quantity of titanium parts. Ultimately, we want to reduce the inherent waste in the current processing of titanium alloy products. The Kroll process, by which most titanium product is made today, is nearly 60 years old. Kroll himself predicted the process would be replaced within 15 years due to inherent inefficiencies - in 1950. Titanium is also mis-characterized as a precious metal, which it is not. It is the ninth most abundant element on the earth's surface. Aluminum by comparison is the third most abundant but has a much more efficient method to convert it to a usable form. Until the turn of the 20th century, aluminum was considered to be as precious as platinum until the Bayer Process brought prices down from $1200/kg to $0.60/kg. Regarding titanium, one way to improve efficiency and buy less material to make the same parts is via Powder Metallurgy (PM). Until recently, titanium alloy powder was very expensive. However, new methods of producing titanium alloy have been developed which generate powder as an output versus massive ingots, which require multiple melts to achieve homogeneity. With powder, in theory, we should be able to get much closer to net shape and reduce the initial buy and reduce significant machining costs. These low cost titanium powders are becoming commercially available, which has the potential to initiate a paradigm shift in the applications of titanium. PM technologies and the consolidation of these new powders are now economically viable with the potential cost of the new powders running approximately an order of magnitude less than conventional PM grade powders. This paper will present the current status of "Project Black Ti" and its potential impact to the F-35 program.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publication4th International Conference Organised by the CAST CRC, on Behalf of the Global Light Metals Alliance
PublisherTrans Tech Publications Ltd
Pages165-168
Number of pages4
ISBN (Print)0878493271, 9780878493272
DOIs
StatePublished - 2009
Event4th International Conference Organised by the CAST CRC, on Behalf of the Global Light Metals Alliance - Gold Coast, QLD, Australia
Duration: Jun 29 2009Jul 1 2009

Publication series

NameMaterials Science Forum
Volume618 619
ISSN (Print)0255-5476
ISSN (Electronic)1662-9752

Conference

Conference4th International Conference Organised by the CAST CRC, on Behalf of the Global Light Metals Alliance
Country/TerritoryAustralia
CityGold Coast, QLD
Period06/29/0907/1/09

Keywords

  • Armstrong process
  • Solid state
  • Titanium

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