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![]() "Cecil Moore" wrote in message ... I'm no metallurgist so forgive my ignorance. Most of us have had the problem of interfacing copper to aluminum. Is there some sort of alloy terminal block that will accomplish that feat? Seems simple enough to create an alloy that gradually transitions from copper to aluminum but what do I know? -- 73, Cecil http://www.w5dxp.com As others have mentioned, there are two issues involved: differing coefficients of thermal expansion and galvanic corrosion. Placing the joint under strong compression is the method of choice for eliminating the thermal expansion problem. Galvanic corrosion is not so simple to solve, however. Galvanic corrosion, often misnamed "electrolysis", occurs when two (or more) dissimilar metals are brought into electrical contact in the presence of water. When the junction, known as a galvanic couple, forms, one of the metals in the couple becomes the anode (which corrodes faster than it would if the other metal was not present), while the other becomes the cathode (which corrodes slower than it would without the other metal being present). When contact between the dissimilar metals is made, the anode will corrode faster while the corrosion of the cathode will decelerate or even stop. If the terms anode and cathode sound familiar to terms used to describe the electrodes in batteries, they are one and the same. A battery is nothing more than two dissimilar electrodes immersed in a chemically conductive solution. If an external circuit is connected to the anode and cathode of a battery, when the circuit draws current, the anode corrodes. The battery is depleted when the anode is fully corroded away. We can use a galvanic series of metals to predict which metal will preferentially corrode with respect to the other. Usually presented in a table, the metals are listed in order of most corroded to least corroded. I am including one such table with this post, courtesy of the McNally Institute, 1637 Sand Key Estates Ct., Clearwater, Fl 33767. Note that aluminum is located near the top of the table while copper is near the center. This shows that the aluminum is anodic and will preferentially corrode with respect to copper. There are two major factors that increase the degree of corrosion in any dissimilar metal couple: (1) how far apart the two metals are in the galvanic series. and (2) the ratio of the exposed areas of the cathode metal to the exposed area of the anode metal. The further apart the metals are, and the larger the exposed cathode metal area to the exposed anode area, the faster the anode will corrode. An aluminum rivet in a copper sheet will quickly corrode away, while a copper rivet in an aluminum sheet will show far less corrosion (the corroded aluminum is spread out over a larger area). One method of corrosion protection is to use metals close to each other in the galvanic series. The other method is to protect the junction between the metals from moisture. One reader suggested the use of a grease such as Penetrox or Noalox. These compounds, which are carried by most electrical supply houses, are merely fine, irregular-shaped zinc particles in a water resistant grease. When used between aluminum and copper joints, the zinc particles pierce the oxide coatings of both the copper and the aluminum when the joint is placed in compression. The grease keeps moisture out and zinc is very compatible with aluminum; however, the grease and zinc particles do not provide galvanic corrosion protection. These greases are best used in aluminum to aluminum joints. Coating the copper with lead, tin, or lead/tin solder before the joint is made will also provide some degree of protection as these metals or alloy are located between copper and aluminum in the galvanic series. An alloy terminal block that transitions gradually from one alloy to another sounds like a great idea, but it is virtually impossible to make such an alloy. As an example copper aluminum alloys cannot contain more than a few percent copper before the copper precipitates out. Welding, machining, or placing a high copper aluminum alloy under strain can cause microscopic particles of copper to form in the alloy. Localized corrosion will occur around these particles. As amateur radio operators who encounter aluminum antennas connected to copper feedlines, about the best we can do is use good mechanical contact combined with a protective paint to keep moisture out of a joint. I usually use an acrylic paint as it has superior ultraviolet resistance which is needed if the joint is outdoors. My personal favorite is clear Krylon spray for this use. It lets you seen the joint and any corrosion that is formed. Some joints have held up for more than 15 years in my experience. 73, Barry WA4VZQ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ GALVANIC SERIES OF METALS AND ALLOYS ----------------------------------------------------------- CORRODED END ( ANODIC OR LEAST NOBLE) MAGNESIUM MAGNESIUM ALLOYS ZINC ALUMINUM 5052, 3004, 3003, 1100, 6053 CADMIUM ALUMINUM 2117, 2017, 2024 MILD STEEL (1018), WROUGHT IRON CAST IRON, LOW ALLOY HIGH STRENGTH STEEL CHROME IRON (ACTIVE) STAINLESS STEEL, 430 SERIES (ACTIVE) 302, 303, 321, 347, 410,416, STAINLESS STEEL (ACTIVE) NI - RESIST 316, 317, STAINLESS STEEL (ACTIVE) CARPENTER 20CB-3 STAINLESS (ACTIVE) ALUMINUM BRONZE (CA 687) HASTELLOY C (ACTIVE) INCONEL 625 (ACTIVE) TITANIUM (ACTIVE) LEAD - TIN SOLDERS LEAD TIN INCONEL 600 (ACTIVE) NICKEL (ACTIVE) 60 NI-15 CR (ACTIVE) 80 NI-20 CR (ACTIVE) HASTELLOY B (ACTIVE) BRASSES COPPER (CA102) MANGANESE BRONZE (CA 675), TIN BRONZE (CA903, 905) SILICONE BRONZE NICKEL SILVER COPPER - NICKEL ALLOY 90-10 COPPER - NICKEL ALLOY 80-20 430 STAINLESS STEEL NICKEL, ALUMINUM, BRONZE (CA 630, 632) MONEL 400, K500 SILVER SOLDER NICKEL (PASSIVE) 60 NI- 15 CR (PASSIVE) INCONEL 600 (PASSIVE) 80 NI- 20 CR (PASSIVE) CHROME IRON (PASSIVE) 302, 303, 304, 321, 347, STAINLESS STEEL (PASSIVE) 316, 317, STAINLESS STEEL (PASSIVE) CARPENTER 20 CB-3 STAINLESS (PASSIVE), INCOLOY 825NICKEL - MOLYBDEUM - CHROMIUM - IRON ALLOY (PASSIVE) SILVER TITANIUM (PASS.) HASTELLOY C & C276 (PASSIVE), INCONEL 625(PASS.) GRAPHITE ZIRCONIUM GOLD PLATINUM PROTECTED END (CATHODIC OR MOST NOBLE) |
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