Monel

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Monel is a trademark (of Special Metals Corporation) for a series of stainless metal alloys, primarily composed of nickel (up to 67%) and copper, with some iron and other trace elements. Monel was created by Robert Crooks Stanley for INCO in 1901, and named for company president Ambrose Monell.

Contents

[edit] Properties

Monel is very difficult to machine as it work-hardens instantly with heat and does not harden into a constant matrix. It needs to be turned and worked at slow speeds and low feed rates. It is resistant to corrosion and acids, and some alloys can withstand a fire in pure oxygen. It is commonly used in applications with highly corrosive conditions. Small additions of aluminium and titanium form an alloy with the same corrosion resistance but with much greater strength. Monel is typically much more expensive than stainless steel.

Monel has a specific gravity of 8.82.

Monel has an electrical conductivity of approximately 3.6% IACS.

[edit] Uses

[edit] Marine applications

Monel's corrosion resistance makes it ideal for marine applications such as piping systems, pump shafts, trolling wire, and strainer baskets. Some alloys are completely non-magnetic and are used for anchor cable aboard minesweepers, housings for magnetic-field measurement equipment, and have applications in the oil drilling industry.

[edit] Musical instruments

Monel is used as the material for valve pistons in some higher quality musical instruments such as trumpets, tubas and french horn rotors. RotoSound introduced the use of Monel for electric bass strings in 1962, and these strings have been used by numerous artists, including The Who, sting, John Deacon, and John Paul Jones. Monel was in use in the early 1930s by other musical string manufacturers, such as Gibson Guitar Corporation, who continue to offer them for mandolin as the Sam Bush signature set.

[edit] Other

Monel is often used for kitchen sinks and in the frames of eyeglasses. It has also been used for firebox stays in fire-tube boilers.

Parts of the Clock of the Long Now, which is intended to run for 10,000 years, are made from Monel because of the corrosion resistance without the use of precious metals.

[edit] Alloys

Trade Name ASME P Group ASTM/AISI

Steel type

UNS
Monel 400 N04400
Monel 401 N04401
Monel 404 N04404
Monel R-405 N04405
Monel K-500 N05500

[edit] See also