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Home > Casting Alloys » Titanium Alloy

Titanium Alloy

Do You Know ?
Car suspension springs could easily be made using titanium that can reduce weight by far, but scarcity of titanium is the problem and certainly the price at which the metal is available. The price of titanium has to be reduced by at least 30% in order to make it a viable option for application in mass-market cars.
Use of titanium and titanium alloys started in the early 1950s. Soon, it becomes very popular with the aerospace, energy, and chemical industries around the globe. Titanium and its alloys are the best material choice for various critical applications because of their high strength-to-weight ratio, excellent mechanical properties, and corrosion resistance features. Titanium alloys are used for many critical hi-tech applications, such as rotating and static gas turbine engine components and parts of aircraft engines.


Other application areas of titanium alloys are :
Nuclear power plants Food processing plants Oil refinery heat exchangers
Marine components Medical protheses

Almost 80% of all the titanium produced worldwide is used in the aerospace industries.


Buying Tips
Dimensions, performance features, and production processes are three things that should be analyzed properly before selecting titanium and titanium alloys.
  • Dimensions: Outer diameter (OD), inner diameter (ID), overall length, and overall thickness are important dimensions.
  • Performance features: It include resistance to corrosion, heat, and wear.
  • Production processes: Most materials are cast, wrought, extruded, forged, cold-finished, hot-rolled, or formed by compacting powdered metals or alloys.
  

Advantages of Titanium Alloys

Advantages of Titanium AlloysAdvantages of Titanium Alloys


Titanium is a light, strong, lustrous, corrosion-resistant transition nonferrous metal. It can be easily alloyed with other elements/metals including iron, aluminum, vanadium, molybdenum and others, for producing strong lightweight alloys for aerospace and other demanding applications. Titanium's advantages can be summarized as follows:
Types of Titanium Alloys
Titanium alloys are classified as Alpha (a), Alpha-Beta (a-ß), and Beta (ß) alloys on the basis of alloying elements they contain. The following table explains and compares these three titanium alloys:

Titanium Alloys

Alpha Alloys (a) Alpha-Beta Alloys (a-ß) Beta Alloys (ß)
Alpha alloys commonly have creep resistance superior to beta alloys. Alpha alloys are suitable for somewhat elevated temperature applications. They are also sometimes used for cryogenic applications. Alpha alloys have adequate strength, toughness, and weldability for various applications, but are not as readily forged as many beta alloys. Alpha alloys cannot be strengthened by heat treatment. Alpha-Beta alloys have chemical compositions that result in a mixture of alpha and beta phases. The beta phase is normally in the range of 10 to 50% at room temperature. Alloys with beta contents less than 20% are weldable. The most commonly used titanium alloy is Ti-6Al-4V, an alpha + beta alloy. While Ti-6Al-4V is fairly difficult to form other alpha + beta alloys normally have better formability. Beta alloys have good forging capability. Beta alloy sheet is cold formable when in the solution treated condition. Beta alloys are prone to a ductile to brittle transition temperature. Beta alloys can be strengthened by heat treatment. Typically beta alloys are solutioned followed by aging to form finely dispersed particles in a beta phase matrix.

Followings are the few common titanium alloys according to the above classifications:
Alpha Alloys (a) Alpha-Beta Alloys (a-ß) Beta Alloys (ß)
Ti-2.5Cu Ti-6Al-4V Ti-13V-11Cr-3Al
Ti-5Al-2.5Sn Ti-6Al-6V-2Sn Ti-8Mo-8V-2Fe-3Al
Ti-8Al-1V-1Mo Ti-6Al-2Sn-2Zr-2Cr-2Mo Ti-10V-2Fe-3Al
Ti-6242 Ti-3Al-2.5V Ti-15-3
Ti-6Al-2Nb-1Ta-0.8 Mo Ti-8Al-1Mo-1V -----
Ti-5Al-5Sn-2Zr-2Mo ----- -----
  
More Applications of Titanium Alloys


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