Historical Articles
March, 1954 issue of Plating
Tricks of the Trade
A Plating Technique
for Examining
Fine Wire Cross Sections
A.A. Wisco, Metallurgical Engineer,
Westinghouse Electric Corp., Bloomfield, N.J.
The determination of degree
of roundness of fine wire such as nichrome, steel and tungsten presents
a problem when the wire diameter is as small
as 0.0005
inch. Actually, the human eye is able to determine roundness of specimens
when the material in question is studied under a metallographic microscope.
However,
the mounting of the fine wire in some suitable fashion has always presented
difficulties. Normal mounting techniques were found lacking in that consistently
reproducible
results could not be obtained.
It was found that the study of the
cross sections of such fine wire was greatly facilitated by the use of an
electroplating
step. Plating of
the wire gave
it mass for easier handling and also provided an area which served
to absorb the
beveling effects that occur on the outer edges of specimens during
preparatory polishing. The cross section of fine wire prepared in this manner
was
thereby provided with a flat non beveled surface.
Detailed plating steps
are as-follows, the fine wire is mounted by winding several snug fitting
turns or loops onto two contacts spaced
vertically
about 5 inches
apart on a small plating rack. The space between each turn or loop
is approximately 1/4 inch. The racked wire is then degreased, electrocleaned
cathodically
for a few seconds in practically any standard commercial electrocleaner.
Care must
be taken to assure that the fine wire is completely submerged in
the electrocleaner before contact is made with the cathode rod to prevent
the wire from burning
through because of the high current density. After cleaning the wire
is plated with nickel to a thickness of approximately 0.0001 inch.
Nichrome
wire is
plated in the Wood chloride bath, steel and tungsten in a Watts’ type
solution. Then the wire is copper plated in a rochelle salt-cyanide
bath to attain a
wire diameter of sufficient size for ease in handling. Deposits of
0.001 to 0.002
inch have been found satisfactory though more or lesser coating thicknesses
may work equally as well. The plating provides a stiff wire which,
when cut from
the rack, can be mounted easily in Lucite, cross-sectioned and polished
by standard metallographic practices.
Before samples so prepared are
examined, they are etched in an ammoniacal peroxide solution to
clean off any copper film which may have been
smeared over the
wire surface to be studied. (To a solution of concentrated ammonium
hydroxide, diluted
with an equal part of water, hydrogen peroxide is added on the
basis of 10 ml of H2O2 per 100 ml of diluted NH4OH.) Examples of wire
prepared by the
technique
outlined above are shown in the photograph. In the ”out-of-round” wire
(a) one can see easily that the cross section is not round; the
actual difference from maximum diameter to minimum diameter is
only 0.0001
inch, but magnification
to 1000x reveals this variation very easily. Section (b) represents
a round cross section.
The method is useful, not only in
the study of wire quality but also in the study of-die contour, die wear
as affected by varying
lubricants,
etc.
Irregular
cross
sectional shapes such as points caused by chipped dies and other
die defects can be seen clearly. The steps given above were found
extremely
useful
in studies of certain fine wires. Variations in the plating procedures
may have
to be employed
where the metal of interest may be other than those described.