About Tungsten
- Tungsten is a metal with
important properties making it an
essential component in many industrial
applications – high melting point,
high density, hardness close to diamond,
thermally and chemically stable, and
environmentally benign.
| 1: Tungsten is the only rare and
exotic metal that can be permanently polished. |
| 2: If you see a single scratch on your
tungsten ring, we will replace or repolish it
immediately, free of charge. |
| 3: Tungsten rings have been referred to as
the "Permanently Polished Rings". |
| 4:Tungsten rings will NOT bend. |
| 5:Each tungsten ring is individually hand
crafted using assorted diamond abrasives and poly
crystalline diamond tooling. |
| 6: Our tungsten rings are cobalt free. |
| 7:Tungsten is about 10 times harder than 18K
Gold, 5 times harder than tool steel, and 4 times harder
than titanium. |
| 8: Your buying direct from the source and
paying wholesale price! |
- The most important use is
as tungsten carbide in hardmetals mainly for
JEWELRY.
- Western world supply is very limited.
- USA, Europe and Japan
consume ~55% of world tungsten....
- An
increase in the tungsten price of more than
300% since 2004 to the
current price of ~$205 per mtu of APT (an
intermediate tungsten product – see below
for details).
- USA domestic
consumption of tungsten is forecasted to
grow by 8% annually between 2009 and 2013.
- Growth markets for
tungsten are still being identified, such as
nickel-tungsten alloys that could replace
chrome plating and nickel-tungsten alloys
that could replace gold-nickel plating.
- Tungsten, with essential
applications in industry, aerospace and
military, is a strategic commodity.
Stockpiles exist in the US and Russia.
China and Japan have also indicated that
they intend to build stockpiles and there
has been some discussion of the possible
creation of a European stockpile
More About Tungsten
TUNGSTEN MINERALISATION
Tungsten Minerals: The only two
tungsten minerals of any importance are two
tungstates or oxides, their relative values
being determined by the measure used to
determine mine ore grades and mine concentrate
grades, i.e. the tungsten trioxide or
WO3, content:
- Scheelite, a calcium
tungsten oxide, CaWO4 - contains 80.5% WO3
- Wolframite, an
iron-manganese tungsten oxide, (Fe, Mn)WO4
- the iron rich variety, called
Ferberite,
contains 76.3% WO3; the manganese rich
variety is termed Hubnerite
and contains 76.6%
WO3
Tungsten
Deposits: Tungsten principally
occurs in four main geological settings, as:
- Skarn deposits
- where granites are intruded into
limestones
- Vein deposits - in
quartz veins adjacent to granites, as a
series of larger separate veins
- Sheeted vein deposits -
as multiple, narrow, closely spaced, quartz
veins forming large sheeted vein systems
within and adjacent to granites
- Pegmatites - very
coarse segregations/concentrations of
specific minerals at the margins of granites
Metals and
Minerals Associated with Tungsten:
Tungsten mineralisation is frequently associated
with minor quantities of sulphides, usually iron
sulphides, but occasionally with economic
quantities of copper sulphides; it may also have
specific associations with other potentially
economic minerals:
- Tungsten and tin in vein and sheeted
vein deposits
- Tungsten and gold in sheeted vein
deposits
- Tungsten and magnetite in skarn deposits
- Tungsten and molybdenum in skarn
deposits
- Tungsten and lithium, tantalum, niobium
and tin in pegmatite deposits
TUNGSTEN
METAL & USES
Tungsten Metal (W):
From a mining and metal industry perspective,
tungsten falls into a loose grouping of around
20 metals termed the minor metals
(the other metal groupings being; the precious
metals, the base metals and the platinum group
metals (PGMs)). Tungsten is unique in having a
combination of relatively extreme properties
compared to other metals; its properties
include:
- a very high melting point,
3422°C (5700°C, boiling) - highest melting
point of all metals
- a very dense, heavy metal,
19.25 g/cm2
- an extremely strong, wear
resistant metal;
has a hardness close to that of diamonds -
highest modulus of elasticity and highest
tensile strength of all metals
- a thermally and chemically
stable metal, with
high thermal conductivity - lowest
coefficient of expansion of the metals
- a high electrical conductivity
- a relatively inert metal which does not
oxidise readily, is extremely corrosive
resistant and relatively acid resistant and
is deemed environmentally benign.
Tungsten Uses:
As a consequence of tungsten metal’s properties,
tungsten alloys are used in various application
areas:
- Tungsten, due to its hardness and
ability to withstand heat, is very suitable
as a critical component of cutting tools
used to drill or cut other metals, concrete
or rock (e.g. household drill bits, metal
fabrication tools, dentists tools, etc..)
- These attributes also make tungsten
alloys suitable for critical temperature
sensitive and wear resistant machinery
components (e.g. engine valves, ball-pint
pen tips, turbine blades, snow tyre studs)
- These wear and temperature resistant
properties, in combination with tungsten’s
electrical conductivity, also make tungsten
ideal as a critical temperature resistant
component in electronics and as a contact
point in electrical circuits (e.g. LCD
panels, TV tubes, laser printers, window
heating wires, car horns, electrical switch
gear)
- Tungsten’s high density properties also
make it suitable as a weight or
counterbalance in specific machinery
applications (airplane flaps, mobile phone
vibration systems, crankcase balancing
weights, golf clubs and as an
environmentally acceptable substitute for
lead shot in cartridges).
TUNGSTEN
INDUSTRY
Overall Industry
Structure: The tungsten industry
may be considered to comprise three principal
divisions:
- Primary Tungsten Producers
– the mines which mine and carry out primary
mineral processing to produce tungsten
mineral concentrates
- Secondary Tungsten Processors
– the processing plants which take the
mineral concentrates and process them into a
number of tungsten powders, including
ammonium paratungstate (APT),
suitable for use in downstream metal/alloy
manufacturing. These powders are often
referred to as “intermediates”
- Tertiary Tungsten Product
Manufacturers – the plants which
produce finished tungsten metal, tungsten
alloys, tungsten tools and other tungsten
end products.
Traditionally there has been some degree of
vertical integration within the
industry, with some common ownership of
secondary processing and tertiary manufacturing
facilities, but this integration rarely extended
upstream to the primary producers, the miners.
However, the expansion of the Chinese economy
and the demand for tungsten has, apparently,
resulted in considerable vertical integration in
the tungsten industry in China, whether through
common ownership or contractual arrangements,
with a move away from exports of concentrates
and into downstream processing and
manufacturing. This pressure towards vertical
integration within China and an apparent desire
to secure long term concentrate supply, has
resulted in various large Chinese companies
investing in Western tungsten projects. This
activity in China has started to affect the
industry outside China, with a number of
strategic mergers, acquisitions and investment
within the Western tungsten industry over the
last two years.
Tungsten Products:
The usages of tungsten result in an industry
structured to produce various categories of
products:
Some 15-20% of tungsten is used to
produce specialist steel alloys,
such as high speed steel, heat resistant
steel and tool steels, all largely utilised
in metal cutting applications and specialist
engineering applications
- In the region of 10-20% of tungsten
would be used to make “mill products”;
the mill products would comprise tungsten
rod, sheet and wire, electrical contacts,
etc…
- An additional 15-20% of tungsten would
be used in the chemical industry and in
specialist applications.
World
Tungsten Metal Production: The
total yearly tonnage of mine tungsten metal
production is very small relative to base
metals, the more recent estimates being:
- 55,000-65,000t of
primary tungsten metal (W) production –
equivalent to 70,000- 85,000t of tungsten
trioxide, WO3 (79.3% W)
The breakdown of this production would be
circa:
- 45,000-50,000 t/ year W from Chinese
mines - of the order of 70%-80% of World
production
- 5,000-9,000 t /year W from Western
orientated economies - circa 10-15%
- 4,000t/year W from other communist or
CIS countries - circa 7%
Tungsten Prices:
Prices for tungsten concentrates
produced by mines and the intermediate tungsten
powers produced by the secondary processors are
quoted in metric tonne units (mtu).
An mtu consists of 10kg of WO3,
as contained within the particular
material in question, concentrates or APT (this
relationship conveniently results in the fact
that a 1% resource grade equates to 1 mtu). The
two materials for which prices are quoted widely
and reported in mtu of WO3 are:
- tungsten trioxide, WO3,
(containing 79.3% tungsten metal), as the
critical constituent in the minerals in mine
concentrates
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