Ever since tungsten was first discovered in 1781 by Carl Wilhelm Scheele, it has paved the way for the ultimate industrial alloy: tungsten carbide.Tungsten carbide, also known as WC, is a hard compound made from tungsten and carbon. With super hardness, toughness—about double density of steel, highly wear and corrosion resistant, tungsten carbide is widely used in cutting tools, blades, dies, nozzles, bushings,  and other wear-resistant parts exposed to abrasion or heavy contact.
In most industrial applications, tungsten carbide is made by powder metallurgy rather than casting. WC powder is formed and sintered into dense hard-metal parts, creating sintered tungsten carbide with high hardness, wear resistance, and long service life. In this blog, we will discuss sintering tungsten carbide in more detail, including the process, properties, applications, and custom services we support.

How the Tungsten Carbide Sintering Process Works

The tungsten carbide sintering process starts with powder preparation. Tungsten carbide powder is usually mixed with a binder metal such as cobalt or nickel. The binder helps the powder particles bond together during sintering and also affects the final balance between hardness and toughness.
After powder mixing, the material is formed into a near-net-shape part. Depending on the part design and production method, this may involve pressing, injection molding, or another powder metallurgy forming process. At this stage, the part has its basic shape, but it is still fragile and not fully dense.
Before final sintering, the temporary binder or forming additives must be removed carefully. This step is important because poor debinding can cause pores, cracks, or internal defects. Once debinding is complete, the part is heated in a controlled furnace. During sintering, the compacted powder shrinks, densifies, and becomes a hard, wear-resistant tungsten carbide component.
In simple terms, the process can be understood as: Powder preparation → forming → debinding → sintering → finishing and inspection
This may look straightforward, but each step affects the final part. For example, uneven powder mixing can lead to inconsistent hardness. Poor shrinkage control can cause dimensional problems. An unsuitable sintering profile can affect density, grain growth, and wear resistance.

Key Properties of Sintered Tungsten Carbide

Sintered tungsten carbide is mainly selected for applications where ordinary steel, stainless steel, or softer alloys wear too quickly. Its value comes from several key properties.

High Hardness

Tungsten carbide is known for its high hardness, so it is suitable for parts that must resist abrasion, sliding contact, or repeated friction. Typical examples include punches, dies, nozzles, guide parts, and wear inserts.
However, hardness alone is not enough. A part that is very hard but too brittle may fail under impact or vibration. That is why the binder content and grain size must be selected according to the real working condition.

Strong Wear Resistance

Wear resistance is one of the biggest reasons to choose sintered tungsten carbide. In abrasive environments, it can offer a much longer service life than many conventional metals. This is especially useful for parts exposed to powders, particles, high-pressure fluids, or repeated metal-to-metal contact.
For custom industrial components, better wear resistance can reduce replacement frequency, maintenance time, and unexpected machine downtime.

Good Toughness for Hard-Metal Applications

Although tungsten carbide is very hard, it also needs enough toughness for many practical applications. The toughness is often adjusted through binder content and carbide grain size. Higher binder content can improve impact resistance, while lower binder content may improve hardness and wear resistance.
The right choice depends on the part’s use. A cutting edge, a wear sleeve, and an impact-loaded tooling insert may all require different material balances.

Dimensional Stability

Sintered tungsten carbide can provide good dimensional stability, but the process must be controlled carefully. During sintering, the part shrinks significantly. This shrinkage must be considered in the tooling design, green part design, and final machining allowance.
For precision components, critical dimensions may still need grinding, EDM, polishing, or other finishing processes after sintering.

Factors That Affect Final Performance

The performance of sintered tungsten carbide is not decided by one factor. It is the result of material selection, process control, and finishing quality.

Binder Content

Cobalt and nickel are commonly used as binder metals. The binder helps hold the tungsten carbide grains together and affects toughness, strength, and corrosion behavior.
In general, higher binder content can improve toughness, but it may reduce hardness and wear resistance. Lower binder content can increase hardness, but the part may become less impact-resistant. This is why material grade selection should always match the application.

Grain Size

Grain size is another important factor. Fine-grain tungsten carbide is often used when high hardness, edge stability, and wear resistance are required. Coarser grain structures may be selected when the part needs better toughness or impact resistance.
For small precision parts, grain size also affects surface finish, edge quality, and final dimensional control.

Sintering Control

When sintering tungsten carbide, temperature, atmosphere, and holding time must be controlled together. The tungsten carbide sintering temperature affects densification, shrinkage, grain growth, hardness, and final dimensional stability.
If the temperature is too low, the part may not reach full density. If the temperature is too high, grain growth or deformation may occur. Holding time also matters. Insufficient time may leave pores, while excessive time may affect grain structure.
For custom parts, the sintering profile should be adjusted according to material grade, part size, geometry, and final performance requirements.

Shrinkage and Distortion

Because tungsten carbide parts shrink during sintering, the original formed part must be designed larger than the final part. This shrinkage is normal, but it must be predictable.
Complex shapes, uneven wall thickness, sharp corners, or unsupported features may increase the risk of distortion. A good design review before tooling can reduce these problems.

Post-Sintering Finishing

After sintering, tungsten carbide becomes extremely hard. This makes conventional machining difficult. For tight tolerances, smooth sealing faces, precision holes, or functional edges, secondary operations may be required.
Common finishing methods include grinding, EDM, lapping, polishing, and surface treatment. These steps can improve dimensional accuracy and surface quality, but they also affect cost and lead time.

Common Applications of Sintered Tungsten Carbide Parts

Sintered tungsten carbide is often used when the working environment involves abrasion, erosion, pressure, or repeated contact. It is not always the lowest-cost material, but it can be the better choice when long service life is more important than initial material cost.
Common applications include:
  • Wear bushings and sleeves
  • Punches and dies
  • Nozzles and spray tips
  • Cutting and forming inserts
  • Valve and seal components
  • Guide pins and contact parts
  • Wire drawing dies
  • Mining and drilling components
  • Precision tooling
  • Small high-wear parts for industrial equipment
For some projects, standard carbide blanks or inserts may be enough. For other projects, especially small, complex, or application-specific components, custom sintered tungsten carbide parts may provide a better solution.

When Should You Choose Custom Sintered Tungsten Carbide Parts?

Custom sintered tungsten carbide parts are worth considering when a standard material cannot meet the part’s wear life, geometry, or performance requirements.
They are especially suitable when:
  • The part is exposed to abrasive wear or erosive flow
  • Ordinary steel wears too quickly
  • The part needs high hardness and long service life
  • The geometry is too complex for economical machining from solid carbide
  • The component must maintain stable dimensions during repeated use
  • Medium or high-volume production can justify tooling and process development
However, tungsten carbide is not the best answer for every part. If the part is very large, very simple, or only needed in one or two prototypes, CNC machining, EDM, or conventional carbide grinding may be more practical. The best route depends on geometry, volume, tolerance, and application environment.

Custom Sintered Tungsten Carbide Parts with XY-GLOBAL

At XY-GLOBAL, we support custom metal and powder metallurgy components from design review to production. For sintered tungsten carbide parts, the key is not only choosing a hard material. The more important task is matching the material grade, forming method, sintering control, and post-processing route to the real application.
We can help review your drawing and evaluate whether tungsten carbide is suitable for your part. If the design is too sharp, too thin, or difficult to sinter consistently, we can suggest practical adjustments before tooling or production starts.
For custom projects, we can support:
  • Material and grade selection
  • DFM review for powder metallurgy or MIM production
  • Tungsten carbide powder and binder evaluation
  • Sintering process planning
  • Shrinkage and tolerance discussion
  • Grinding, EDM, polishing, or other finishing options
  • Prototype and production support
  • Inspection for critical dimensions and functional surfaces
Need custom tungsten carbide parts? Share your drawing, 3D file, or sample with us. you can also click here to know more about us. We can help evaluate your design, material selection, and manufacturing process.

Conclusion

Sintered tungsten carbide is a high-performance material for parts that need hardness, wear resistance, and long service life. Its final quality depends not only on tungsten carbide powder, but also on binder content, grain size, sintering control, shrinkage behavior, and post-sintering finishing.
For custom industrial parts, the best result comes from matching the material and process to the real working condition. With proper design review and manufacturing planning, sintered tungsten carbide can be used to produce durable, precise, and application-specific components for demanding environments.

 

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