Vacuum Brazing
VACUUM BRAZING
Vacuum brazing is a term for various metal joining or
brazing processes that take place in a chamber or retort below atmospheric
pressure, otherwise known as a vacuum furnace. Vacuum brazing is brazing in a
furnace using a vacuum atmosphere.
A vacuum furnace is a furnace using low atmospheric
pressures instead of a protective gas atmosphere like most heat treating
furnaces. Furnaces are categorized as hot wall or cold wall, depending on
the location of the heating and insulating components. Cold wall furnaces are
used in vacuum brazing
Assemblies are bright and clean (shiny) after vacuum
brazing because the extremely low amount oxygen in a vacuum atmosphere prevents
oxidation of parts. Vacuum brazing is particularly useful where base metals are
processed that adversely react with other atmospheres, or where entrapped fluxes or
gases are intolerable. Vacuum brazing is widely used to braze base metals of
stainless steel, super alloys and carbon low alloy steels.
Vacuum brazing offers the combination of high cleanliness
and uniform heating and cooling or rapid cooling. Vacuum brazing is ideal for oxidation sensitive
materials such as those used in the aerospace industry.
Wall Colmonoy Corporation is the pioneer in furnace brazing
of high-temperature base metals using nickel-based filler metals. Additionally,
Wall Colmonoy Dayton,
Ohio has eight
brazing/heat treating furnaces, including the world’s largest top-loading vacuum furnace at 120” dia. X 180” high and vacuum brazing
is one of their specialties. Since 1959,
Wall Colmonoy Dayton has specialized in
furnace brazing--including hydrogen and vacuum brazing--and thermal processing of all types
of metals. With furnaces handling work loads of up to 10 tons and quality
assurance procedures to aerospace requirements,
Wall Colmonoy Dayton has the
capabilities and experience to handle as much (or as little) as you need.
Brazing is broadly defined as a group of joining processes
that occur above 840 degrees F (400 degrees C) and below the melting point of
the base metal. Additionally, brazing produces coalescence by the melting and subsequent resolidification of a filler
metal or brazing alloy in the very narrow space between surfaces to be joined. The brazing alloy or
brazing filler
metal must have a lower melting point than the material being joined, because in
brazing the base metal does not melt. In conventional brazing, molten filler
metal is distributed between closely fitted surfaces of the
base metal joint by capillary action – even against gravity.
Most of the common metals can be brazed, but not
necessarily with the same brazing filler metal equipment, method, or procedure.
Wall Colmonoy Dayton
offers the quality assurance of non-destructive testing, is ISO 9001: 2000
registered and NADCAP accredited for heat treating, furnace brazing and hardness
testing.
Call or email today and Wall
Colmonoy Dayton's brazing and heat treating experts will help you determine the
best thermal processing or brazing service to meet your needs.