Four Things to Know About Molybdenum Before You Source Parts

 For a number of applications in aerospace, defense, energy, and medical diagnostics, molybdenum offers an ideal combination of high performance and practicality. Key characteristics include:

  • A melting point of 4753°F (2620°C) and a peak working temperature of about 3565°F (1965°C)
  • Excellent material strength at high temperatures: tensile strength of about 14,000 psi at 2200°F (1200°C), for example.
  • High thermal conductivity: can be quenched from very high temperatures without cracking
  • Low vapor pressure: minimal outgassing even in hard vacuum
  • Low coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE): exceptional dimensional stability for applications involving temperature swings
  • Corrosion resistant: good for harsh environments

These properties combine to make molybdenum a good fit for high temperatures, hard vacuums, and applications requiring strong, lightweight metals. 

The trade-off is that molybdenum has several pitfalls that can trap the unwary. Let’s take a look at what you need to know about this highly useful material.

 

Molybdenum is brittle

Commercial molybdenum is produced by compressing and sintering the powdered metal to create an ingot. 

At this point, the individual grains are randomly oriented and impurities migrate to the grain boundaries, 

resulting in a material that is very hard but also very brittle. Annealing the ingot improves ductility. 

The transition temperature between brittle and ductile is at about 100°F (38°C). 

Once the bulk molybdenum is heated to this point, the individual grains begin to lengthen and 

become oriented and tightly interlocked. The material remains somewhat ductile even at room temperature. 

If molybdenum is heated above its recrystallization temperature of 1850°F (1010°C), 

whether by the processor or during use, then the grain boundaries reform, grain orientation randomizes, 

and the material will become highly brittle if returned to temperature.
Even properly annealed molybdenum remains somewhat brittle at room temperature. 

The solution is to heat the metal to at least its transition temperature or while working it. 

This requires ovens and special handling equipment next to the machine tools, 

as well as staff with the expertise to handle superheated metal without harming themselves, the equipment, or the parts. 

Failure to reach the transition temperature, for example, can lead to cracking during some operations.

Even properly annealed molybdenum remains somewhat brittle at room temperature. 
The solution is to heat the metal to at least its transition temperature or while working it. 
This requires ovens and special handling equipment next to the machine tools, 
as well as staff with the expertise to handle superheated metal without harming themselves, 
the equipment, or the parts. Failure to reach the transition temperature, for example, can lead to 
cracking during some operations.

 

Molybdenum dulls tools fast

Although the hardness of molybdenum is one of its advantages, 

that same hardness causes machine tools to lose their edges more rapidly. 

When dull tooling is applied to molybdenum, the brittleness of the molybdenum causes it to 

delaminate and chip, potentially destroying the work piece. Working with sharp edges is essential.

Most machine shops can sharpen tooling. The challenge with molybdenum is the frequency involved. 

Machining a piece of aluminum might require three stops for sharpening. 

Machining the same part in molybdenum might require 20 stops, or 7X as much time. 

And if the machinist doesn’t recognize when the tool is getting dull, the result can be a chipped part, 

a broken tool, or both.

 

Molybdenum often needs non-traditional cutting tools

One of the ways to avoid the sharpening dilemma is to use alternative 

methods such as water jet cutters, lasers, or electrical discharge machining (EDM) cutting tools. 

These tools are effective but not every machine shop has the equipment — or the expertise 

to run it well enough to reliably turn out small and or complex higher-precision parts.

 

Molybdenum can be challenging to source

COVID exposed the fragility of our global supply chain, which has yet to return to the speeds and 

levels of reliability that we once took for granted. It’s beginning to appear that the days of just-in-time 

sourcing are gone. As a specialty material, molybdenum now has very long lead times. 

Don’t assume that every organization listing molybdenum on their website can deliver the volumes and

material grades desired.

 

Find the right machine shop

Sourcing molybdenum parts takes more than just writing a specification and picking up the phone. 

Look for an organization with a deep understanding of the material born of long experience. 

They should have specialized equipment and expert in-house staff with a track record of machining molybdenum. 

They need to be certified to relevant quality management systems such as AS9100 for aerospace applications. 

Finally, they need an established supply chain to reliably support your needs.

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