Copper–tungsten

Copper–tungsten (tungsten–copper, CuW, or WCu) is a mixture of copper and tungsten. As copper and tungsten are not mutually soluble, the material is composed of distinct particles of one metal dispersed in a matrix of the other one. The microstructure is therefore rather a metal matrix composite instead of a true alloy.

The material combines the properties of both metals, resulting in a material that is heat-resistant, ablation-resistant, highly thermally and electrically conductive, and easy to machine.

Parts are made from the CuW composite by pressing the tungsten particles into the desired shape, sintering the compacted part, then infiltrating with molten copper. Sheets, rods, and bars of the composite mixture are available as well.

Commonly used copper tungsten mixtures contains 10–50 wt.% of copper, the remaining portion being mostly tungsten. The typical properties is dependent on its composition. The mixture with less wt.% of copper has higher density, higher hardness, and higher resistivity. The typical density of CuW90, with 10% of copper, is 16.75 g/cm3 and 11.85 g/cm3 for CuW50 . CuW90 has higher hardness and resistivity of 260 HB kgf/mm2 and 6.5 μΩ.cm than CuW50.

Typical properties of commonly used copper tungsten compositions

CompositionDensityHardnessResistivityIACSBending strength
wt. %g/cm3HB Kgf/mm2μΩ.cm≤ %≥Mpa≥
W50/Cu5011.851153.254
W55/Cu4512.301253.549
W60/Cu4012.751403.747
W65/Cu3513.301553.944
W70/Cu3013.801754.142790
W75/Cu2514.501954.538885
W80/Cu2015.152205.034980
W85/Cu1515.902405.7301080
W90/Cu1016.752606.5271160
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