Oxygen in Copper and Copper Alloys (TC600)
Applications | 2013 | LECOInstrumentation
Copper is the primary material for electrical conductors due to its superior combination of cost, conductivity, mechanical strength and surface quality. Trace oxygen in copper and its alloys can significantly influence conductivity, hydrogen embrittlement and overall performance in electrical applications. Reliable quantification of oxygen impurities is therefore essential for quality control and material specification in industries ranging from power transmission to electronics manufacturing.
This application note presents a detailed procedure for determining oxygen in copper and copper alloys using the inert gas fusion method coupled with infrared detection. The objectives are to describe sample preparation, instrument configuration, calibration and analysis parameters necessary to achieve high accuracy and precision across a broad concentration range (from sub-ppm to several hundred ppm O).
Sample Preparation:
Typical oxygen determinations on various copper grades show:
The inert gas fusion IR approach offers:
Emerging developments may include:
The described inert gas fusion infrared detection method on LECO TC600-series instruments provides a reliable, precise and user-friendly solution for quantifying oxygen in copper and copper alloys. Adherence to the outlined sample preparation and calibration protocols ensures reproducible results across different material grades, supporting stringent quality requirements in electrical and electronic industries.
No external literature references were cited in the original application note.
Elemental Analysis
IndustriesMaterials Testing, Energy & Chemicals
ManufacturerLECO
Summary
Importance of the Topic
Copper is the primary material for electrical conductors due to its superior combination of cost, conductivity, mechanical strength and surface quality. Trace oxygen in copper and its alloys can significantly influence conductivity, hydrogen embrittlement and overall performance in electrical applications. Reliable quantification of oxygen impurities is therefore essential for quality control and material specification in industries ranging from power transmission to electronics manufacturing.
Objectives and Study Overview
This application note presents a detailed procedure for determining oxygen in copper and copper alloys using the inert gas fusion method coupled with infrared detection. The objectives are to describe sample preparation, instrument configuration, calibration and analysis parameters necessary to achieve high accuracy and precision across a broad concentration range (from sub-ppm to several hundred ppm O).
Methodology and Instrumentation
Sample Preparation:
- Cut representative solid samples to 0.5–2.0 g.
- Remove surface contaminants by chemical etching (HCl at 20 °C, mixed HNO₃/CH₃COOH/H₃PO₄ at 70 °C) or by gentle abrasion, followed by sequential distilled water and methanol rinses, then warm‐air drying.
- Furnace: LECO TC600 (also applicable: RO600, TCH600, ROH600).
- Crucibles: Graphite 776-247; optional electrodes (501-073 powder, 611-351-181/182 tips depending on automation).
- Calibration materials: Nickel-plated copper pins with certified O content (LECO 501-147/148/149/990; NIST, BCR standards).
- Outgas cycles: 3; analysis delay: 20 s; analysis time: minimum 40 s; integration delay: 5 s; detection by infrared sensor for oxygen.
- Furnace power control: Power mode with purge (15 s), outgas (15 s) at 6000 W, analysis at 5000 W; furnace on-time: 30 s.
- Perform blank measurements using graphite powder to establish baseline.
- Calibrate instrument with certified copper pins (three replicates each).
- Weigh and log each copper sample (0.5–2.0 g), then load via the automated or manual electrode loader.
- Run semi-automatic analyses and apply drift corrections as needed.
Key Results and Discussion
Typical oxygen determinations on various copper grades show:
- Electrolytic Tough Pitch (ETP) copper: ~0.058 % O, standard deviation ~0.0004 %.
- Refined copper (NIST 885): ~0.0316 % O, SD ~0.0002 %.
- Oxygen-Free High Conductivity (OFHC) copper: 0.0001–0.0002 % O, SD ~0.00003 %.
- LECO nickel-plated reference: ~0.0237 % O, SD ~0.0001 %.
Benefits and Practical Applications
The inert gas fusion IR approach offers:
- High sensitivity down to sub-ppm oxygen levels, critical for electronic and high-purity copper grades.
- Robustness for routine QA/QC in production environments.
- Minimal sample preparation time when using pre-characterized calibration pins.
Future Trends and Potential Applications
Emerging developments may include:
- Integration of advanced automation and robotics for unattended high-throughput analysis.
- Enhanced spectroscopic detection for simultaneous multi-element fusion analyses (e.g., sulfur, nitrogen).
- Miniaturized fusion systems for in-line process monitoring and real-time feedback in continuous casting operations.
Conclusion
The described inert gas fusion infrared detection method on LECO TC600-series instruments provides a reliable, precise and user-friendly solution for quantifying oxygen in copper and copper alloys. Adherence to the outlined sample preparation and calibration protocols ensures reproducible results across different material grades, supporting stringent quality requirements in electrical and electronic industries.
Reference
No external literature references were cited in the original application note.
Content was automatically generated from an orignal PDF document using AI and may contain inaccuracies.
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