Tungsten Carbide (WC-Co) Cemented Carbides: The Backbone of Modern Machining

Introduction

Tungsten carbide (WC) cemented carbides, formed by sintering WC micro-particles with a cobalt (Co) binder, deliver the highest combination of hardness and fracture toughness of any bulk engineering material. With hardness reaching 1600-2000 HV and fracture toughness of 10-15 MPa·m1/2, WC-Co cermets dominate cutting tools, mining bits, and wear parts. This review evaluates commercial WC-Co grades and provides specification guidance for machining and tooling engineers.

Key Specifications

Property WC-Co (6% Co, Fine) WC-Co (10% Co, Medium) WC-Co (15% Co, Coarse) HSS (M42) Ceramic (Al2O3)
Hardness (HV30) 1800-2000 1500-1700 1200-1400 800-900 2200-2500
Transverse Rupture Strength (MPa) 2800-3200 3200-3600 3500-4000 3000-3500 400-600
Fracture Toughness (MPa·m1/2) 8-10 10-12 12-15 15-20 3-5
Compressive Strength (MPa) 4500-5000 4000-4500 3500-4000 2500-3000 3000-4000
Youngs Modulus (GPa) 620-650 580-620 540-580 200-220 350-400
Density (g/cm3) 14.9 14.5 14.0 8.2 3.9
Grain Size (um) 0.5-1.0 1.0-2.0 2.0-5.0 N/A N/A
Max Cutting Temp (C) 600-800 600-800 600-800 400-500 1000-1200

Note: Fine grades (0.5-1.0 um) prioritize wear resistance; coarse grades (2.0-5.0 um) prioritize toughness. Co content trades off hardness vs. toughness.

Performance Highlights

Wear Resistance: WC-Co retains cutting edge sharpness 10-50× longer than HSS in continuous cutting. In abrasive environments (cast iron, composites, non-ferrous), tool life extensions of 5-20× vs. coated HSS are typical.

High-Temperature Hardness: WC-Co retains >80% room-temperature hardness at 600C, enabling dry machining and high-speed cutting. Competing HSS softens rapidly above 400C.

Toughness: The Co binder phase provides fracture toughness of 10-15 MPa·m1/2, enabling interrupted cuts and heavy roughing. Ceramics (Al2O3, Si3N4) have 3-5× lower toughness and fail catastrophically in interrupted cuts.

Coating Synergy: CVD and PVD coatings (TiN, TiCN, Al2O3, diamond) deposit effectively on WC-Co substrates, extending tool life 3-10×. Modern coated carbide inserts achieve 20-40 min tool life in steel turning at 200-300 m/min cutting speed.

Application Scenarios

  • Metal Cutting (Turning, Milling, Drilling): 80% of cutting tool inserts are WC-Co. Fine grades (5-10% Co) for finish turning; medium grades (10-12% Co) for milling and drilling; coarse grades (15% Co) for heavy roughing and interrupted cuts.
  • Mining and Construction: Tricone bits, DTH hammers, and roadheader picks use coarse WC-Co (15-25% Co) for impact resistance. Button inserts (spherical WC-Co) withstand 100,000+ impact cycles in granite drilling.
  • Wear Parts: Dies, nozzles, seals, and guides. WC-Co dies for steel wire drawing achieve 50-100× the life of tool steel dies.
  • Wood Working: Tungsten carbide tipped (TCT) circular saw blades and router bits. WC-Co teeth brazed onto steel bodies combine cutting performance with impact resistance.
  • Armor Piercing Projectiles: WC-Co penetrators exploit extreme density (14.5-15.0 g/cm3) and compressive strength to defeat armor. (Defense application noted for completeness.)

Selection Advice

Choose Fine Grain (0.5-1.0 um, 6-10% Co) for finish turning, boring, and non-ferrous cutting where surface finish and edge sharpness matter. Example: Sandvik GC4015, Kennametal K313.

Choose Medium Grain (1.0-2.0 um, 10-12% Co) for general-purpose milling, drilling, and interrupted cuts. The workhorse grade for job shops. Example: Sandvik GC4230, Kennametal K680M.

Choose Coarse Grain (2.0-5.0 um, 12-25% Co) for heavy roughing, mining, and impact-loaded applications. Example: Sandvik Coromant R390 (mining grade), Kennametal KM1.

Coating selection: TiN (gold) for HSS replacement; TiCN (grey) for wear resistance; Al2O3 (black) for high-temperature turning; diamond (CVD) for non-ferrous and composites. Multilayer coatings (TiCN + Al2O3 + TiN) are standard for steel machining.

Cost Considerations

WC-Co raw material cost is dominated by tungsten and cobalt prices, which are volatile (tungsten: $30-50/kg; cobalt: $30-80/kg). A WC-Co insert (TPGN 160308) costs $2-8/piece depending on coating and grade. This is 5-20× the cost of HSS tooling, but tool life extensions of 10-50× deliver lower cost per part in production machining.

Supply Chain

Leading suppliers: Sandvik (Sweden), Kennametal (USA), Iscar (Israel/Berkley), Mitsubishi Materials (Japan), Zhuzhou Cemented Carbide (China). Chinese suppliers (Zhuzhou, Xiamen Golden Egret) offer 30-50% cost advantage for standard grades, narrowing the quality gap for medium and coarse grain sizes.

Verdict

WC-Co cemented carbides are the enabling material for modern machining and mining. No alternative matches the combination of hardness, toughness, and high-temperature performance at acceptable cost. For machining engineers: specifying the correct grain size and Co content for your application can double tool life and cut cost per part by 30-50%. The supply chain is mature; dual-sourcing between Western and Chinese suppliers is straightforward for standard grades.

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