Cemented carbides composed of tungsten carbide (WC) as the hard phase and cobalt (Co) as the binder phase are rare industrial materials that “retain hardness even at high temperatures." Their maximum continuous operating temperature can reach 800°C, and they can withstand short-term temperatures exceeding 1,000°C—far outperforming ordinary steel (e.g., 45# steel softens above 500°C) and high-speed steel (W18Cr4V loses significant hardness around 600°C). This heat resistance is not due to a single factor but the synergistic effect of tungsten carbide’s inherent high-temperature stability, cobalt’s compatible binding properties, and the microstructural characteristics formed by the two. For industrial production, this trait solves critical pain points in high-temperature scenarios: from frictional heat generation (600–800°C) during metal cutting to the operating temperatures (400–500°C) of aluminum alloy die-casting molds, and wear of mining equipment in underground high-temperature environments. This article breaks down the core reasons for the heat resistance of WC-Co cemented carbides from three dimensions—component properties, microstructure, and practical applications—making the principles easy to understand.
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The heat resistance of cemented carbides first stems from the inherent properties of their core component: tungsten carbide. As the “hard phase," WC acts like the “steel reinforcement in a building," providing stable support for the material at high temperatures. This is reflected in three key aspects:
Tungsten carbide has an extremely high melting point of 2,870°C—far higher than the typical high temperatures encountered in industrial settings (most high-temperature working conditions are <1,000°C). For comparison:
Tungsten carbide has a hexagonal close-packed (HCP) crystal structure, where atoms are tightly arranged with strong bonding forces. This structure prevents atomic diffusion or structural disorder at high temperatures:
In high-temperature industrial environments, materials must resist not only “temperature" but also “environmental corrosion" (e.g., oxidation in air, reaction with cutting fluids). Tungsten carbide exhibits stable chemical properties at high temperatures:
A common question arises: Cobalt has a melting point of only 1,495°C—far lower than WC—so why doesn’t it undermine heat resistance? In reality, cobalt (typically 6–15% by weight) acts as a “binder phase" and does not exist in isolation. Instead, it is uniformly dispersed between WC grains, forming a microstructure where “WC grains are encapsulated by the Co phase." Its high-temperature role focuses on two key functions:
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At room temperature, cobalt is a ductile metal that “binds" hard but brittle WC grains together to prevent cracking. At high temperatures (e.g., 600–800°C), cobalt softens slightly (becoming “semi-solid") but does not fully melt or flow away:
At high temperatures, material grains tend to “grow" (small grains merge into larger ones), leading to hardness loss. Cobalt acts as an “inhibitor" to prevent excessive WC grain growth at high temperatures:
Beyond the individual properties of its components, the “dense microstructure" formed by WC and cobalt further enhances heat resistance. High-quality WC-Co cemented carbides undergo high-temperature sintering (1,400–1,500°C) to form a structure where “WC grains are uniformly distributed, Co fills gaps, and there are no significant pores" (density typically ≥14.5g/cm³). The advantages of this structure are:
If a material contains pores, high-temperature air or corrosive media can seep into the interior through these pores, accelerating oxidation (e.g., ceramics with high porosity oxidize 3x faster than WC-Co). The dense structure of WC-Co:
In high-temperature scenarios, materials often bear loads (e.g., cutting forces, mold pressure). The uniform distribution of WC grains in WC-Co ensures that loads are evenly transferred through the Co phase to each WC grain, avoiding localized stress concentration:
To highlight its advantages, below is a comparison of WC-Co with other common “wear-resistant, heat-resistant materials" used in industry:
| Material Type | Key Composition | Melting Point (°C) | Max Continuous Operating Temp (°C) | Hardness Retention at 500°C | Typical High-Temperature Applications |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| WC-Co Cemented Carbide | Tungsten Carbide + 6–15% Co | 2,870 (WC) | 600–800 | ≥90% (HRA) | Metal cutting tools, die-casting molds |
| High-Speed Steel | W18Cr4V | 1,400 | 400–500 | ≤60% (HRC) | Low-speed cutting tools, room-temperature molds |
| Alumina Ceramic | Al₂O₃ | 2,054 | 800–1,000 | ≥95% (HRA) | High-temperature insulators, non-impact wear parts |
| Ordinary Carbon Steel | 45# Steel | 1,538 | 300–400 | ≤30% (HRC) | Room-temperature structural parts, non-load-bearing components |
As shown, while WC-Co’s heat resistance is slightly lower than that of alumina ceramic, it balances “heat resistance + impact resistance" (ceramics are prone to cracking at high temperatures). Compared to high-speed steel and carbon steel, its advantages in heat resistance and hardness retention are significant—making it one of the best choices for “high-temperature wear + load-bearing" scenarios.
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The heat resistance of WC-Co varies with its formulation, primarily influenced by cobalt content and tungsten carbide grain size. Consider these factors when selecting a grade:
With sufficient toughness to prevent cracking, lower cobalt content means a higher proportion of WC—and better heat resistance:
Fine-grain WC (1–3μm) has more grain boundaries, where cobalt atoms act as stronger “inhibitors" to prevent grain growth at high temperatures:
Many assume WC-Co lacks heat resistance because cobalt has a low melting point (1,495°C)—this is a typical misunderstanding that ignores the material’s microstructure:
The heat resistance of WC-Co cemented carbides is not due to a single component but the synergy of “WC’s high-melting stable skeleton, cobalt’s high-temperature binding and buffering, and a dense, uniform microstructure." This trait allows it to retain hardness at 600–800°C while withstanding moderate impact and loads—making it ideal for industrial scenarios like metal cutting, high-temperature molds, and high-temperature mining environments.
For professionals in the tungsten carbide industry, when recommending WC-Co products, align the grade with the customer’s “maximum operating temperature + impact load": Choose low-cobalt fine-grain grades (e.g., YG6X) for high-temperature, low-impact scenarios; medium-cobalt medium-grain grades (e.g., YG8) for medium-temperature, medium-impact scenarios; and high-cobalt coarse-grain grades (e.g., YG15) for low-temperature, high-impact scenarios.
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