Feb 29, 2024 Leave a message

The Difference Between High Temperature Molybdenum And Pure Molybdenum

High-temperature molybdenum is also called molybdenum-lanthanum alloy (MoLa). Molybdenum is doped with a small amount of lanthanum oxide (La2O3) particles (0.4%-0.7%) to form a so-called laminated fiber structure. This special microstructure remains stable at temperatures up to 2000°C. Therefore, molybdenum-lanthanum oxide is creep-resistant even under extreme high-temperature use conditions. We process these alloys primarily into high-temperature furnace components such as heating wires and bands, sintering and annealing boats or evaporator coils. High-temperature molybdenum is not easy to become brittle after long-term use in high-temperature environments, and its processing performance is also better.

 

Molybdenum Lanthanum

pure Mo La Alloy

 

Pure molybdenum (Mo1), the molybdenum content is greater than 99.95%. Mainly used in high temperature environments with strict purity requirements. Compared with high-temperature molybdenum, the recrystallization temperature is low and the processability is poor.

 

Molybdenum Lanthanum Alloy

 Molybdenum TZM Alloy

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