After working in the tungsten carbide products industry for years, I often get asked by customers: “Why can a magnet stick to some of your tungsten carbide drill bits but not others? Is tungsten carbide magnetic or not?" The truth is, there’s no “black-or-white" answer—pure tungsten carbide itself has no magnetism, but the tungsten carbide products we use daily (like drill bits or cutting inserts) usually have some magnetism, and it all comes down to the “binder" added during production. In this article, I’ll break it down in plain language: why pure tungsten carbide isn’t magnetic, what makes tungsten carbide products magnetic, whether magnetism affects performance in real use, and I’ll clear up a few common misconceptions. By the end, you’ll have all the answers you need.![]()
To understand tungsten carbide’s magnetism, you need to separate two scenarios: “pure tungsten carbide" and “practical tungsten carbide products"—this is where most confusion happens:
Pure tungsten carbide has the chemical formula WC. Its crystal structure is unique—atoms are arranged in a highly regular pattern, with no “free electrons" that can be attracted by magnets, nor “magnetic domains" (think of these as “tiny magnetic units" within a material). Simply put, it’s like copper, aluminum, or glass—a “non-magnetic material." Even with a strong magnet, it won’t stick.
I once sent a sample of pure tungsten carbide powder to a customer who works in testing. They later反馈: “I buried a magnet in the powder, and when I pulled it out, it was completely clean—no powder stuck to it." That’s direct proof that pure tungsten carbide has no magnetism.
The tungsten carbide drill bits or cutting inserts we use aren’t 100% pure tungsten carbide. Pure tungsten carbide is extremely brittle—drop it, and it’ll shatter. To make it tough and durable, we add a “binder" to hold the tungsten carbide particles together. The most common binders are cobalt (Co) and nickel (Ni)—both of these metals are magnetic (just like iron, they stick to magnets). So when these binders are added, the finished tungsten carbide product naturally becomes magnetic.
For example, regular tungsten carbide drill bits usually contain 5%-15% cobalt—hold a magnet to them, and they’ll stick firmly. Only special products (like tungsten carbide parts for medical use) use “non-magnetic nickel alloys" as binders. These alloys are specially treated to remove magnetism, so these products won’t “stick to magnets."
![]()
Even among magnetic tungsten carbide products, some stick to magnets firmly, while others stick weakly. This isn’t a quality issue—it’s determined by three factors. A table makes it clearer:
| Factor | Details | Impact on Magnetism | Common Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Binder Type | Cobalt (Co) binders = strong magnetism; Nickel (Ni) binders = weaker magnetism; Non-magnetic alloys (e.g., non-magnetic nickel-copper alloys) = no magnetism at all | Cobalt > Nickel > Non-magnetic Alloys | Tungsten carbide drill bits (cobalt-bonded) stick firmly; medical tungsten carbide parts (non-magnetic alloy-bonded) don’t stick. |
| Binder Content | The more magnetic binder you add, the stronger the magnetism (assuming a magnetic binder is used) | Higher content = stronger magnetism | A tungsten carbide mold with 15% cobalt sticks more firmly than a tungsten carbide insert with 5% cobalt. |
| Sintering Process | Excessively high sintering temperatures or long holding times may “weaken" the binder’s magnetism (but won’t eliminate it entirely) | Slight differences in magnetism due to process, but the impact is small | Some inserts in the same batch of tungsten carbide blades stick slightly stronger than others—this comes from tiny temperature variations during sintering. |
A customer once bought two batches of tungsten carbide blades and reported: “One batch sticks firmly, and the other sticks loosely." We checked our production records—both batches had 10% cobalt content, but the first batch was sintered at 10°C lower. The binder’s magnetism was better preserved, so it stuck more firmly. Once we explained this, the customer understood: magnetism strength doesn’t affect the blade’s hardness or wear resistance—no need to overthink it.
Many customers ask: “The tungsten carbide drill bit I bought is magnetic—will that affect drilling accuracy? Will it be pulled off course by magnetic fields?" For 99% of everyday scenarios, there’s nothing to worry about. Here are answers to two common concerns:
No!
The magnetism in tungsten carbide products comes from the binder, which is evenly distributed between tungsten carbide particles. It doesn’t change the tungsten carbide’s hardness or the product’s dimensional accuracy. For example, when using a magnetic tungsten carbide end mill to machine metal parts, the dimensional error can still be controlled within 0.01mm—magnetism has nothing to do with it.
Only in extremely strong magnetic fields—otherwise, no!
The magnetic fields in everyday environments (like near motors or transformers) are weak, and the magnetism of tungsten carbide products is relatively mild—nowhere near strong enough to pull them off course. However, in “strong magnetic environments" (e.g., near MRI machines), you’ll need “non-magnetic tungsten carbide products." But these scenarios are rare—mostly in specialized fields like medicine or aerospace. Regular industrial use doesn’t require this.
Finally, let’s clear up two common misconceptions to help you avoid choosing the wrong product:
Wrong!
Magnetism strength has nothing to do with product quality (hardness or wear resistance). For example, the quality of a tungsten carbide insert depends on the fineness of the tungsten carbide particles, whether the cobalt content meets standards, and whether sintering is thorough—not how firmly it sticks to a magnet. I’ve seen low-quality inserts with excessive cobalt content (over 20%)—they stick to magnets very firmly, but their tungsten carbide particles are too coarse, so they dull after just two days of use.
Wrong!
Specialty tungsten carbide products use “non-magnetic binders" for specific needs, such as:
If you need “non-magnetic tungsten carbide" for your application, be sure to mention it to the manufacturer—don’t assume “all stick to magnets."
If you’re not sure whether you need “magnetic" or “non-magnetic" tungsten carbide products, or if you want to know the magnetism of a specific product (e.g., the cobalt content of a drill bit or whether it sticks to magnets), feel free to reach out. We’ll recommend the perfect product for your needs—so you don’t have to let “magnetism" become a problem when choosing tungsten carbide.
Persona di contatto: Mrs. Lilian
Telefono: +86 159 280 92745
Fax: 86-028-67230808