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Advances in Thermal Spray Technology
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Abstract: Variations of thermal-spray techniques and the diversity of sprayable materials, along with advanced spray-control systems, have created new opportunities for the thermal-spray industry. Use of the process has grown well beyond the initial stage, and while its continuing importance in maintenance and repair is assured, thermal spray has a great deal more to offer.
Thermal-spray technology has entered a new phase of development. Largely accepted by the gas-turbine industry, the process is rapidly gaining recognition as a viable process in "front-end" design in other industries.
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Variations of thermal-spray techniques and the diversity of sprayable materials,
along with advanced spray-control systems, have created new opportunities for the
thermal-spray industry. Use of the process has grown well beyond the initial stage,
and while its continuing importance in maintenance and repair is assured, thermal
spray has a great deal more to offer. Thermal-spray technology has entered a new phase
of development. Largely accepted by the gas-turbine industry, the process is rapidly
gaining recognition as a viable process in "front-end" design in other
industries.
Plasma spray: taming a complex process
All thermal-spray processes use a device (the gun) to melt and propel a coating material
at high velocities onto a substrate where solidification occurs rapidly (l million degrees
per second), forming either a protective coating or a bulk shape. There are basically
three types of thermal spray guns: plasma, combustion-flame, and two-wire electric arc.
The consumable coating material (feedstock) is in the form of powder, wire, or rod,
and combustion or electrical power supplies the energy to achieve melting and
acceleration.
Plasma-arc spraying uses a thermal plasma (the highest temperature heat source), and is
the most versatile thermal-spraying process. The thermal plasma, a dense, highly ionized
gas, has a sufficiently high enthalpy density to melt and deposit powders of virtually
any metal alloy or refractory ceramic, as well as combinations of materials.
Traditional DC thermal-plasma units can spray powders at high velocities (>200 m/sec),
yielding good coating densities, potentially approaching theoretical density. Plasma
spraying results in fine, essentially equiaxed grains, without extensive columnar
boundaries, of particular advantage in certain ceramics applications (thermal-barrier
coatings, for example). Coatings are chemically homogeneous; there is no (or controllable)
change in composition with thickness. It is possible, however, to change from depositing
a metal, to a continuously varying metal-ceramic mixture, to a ceramic-rich mixture, and
finally to a completely ceramic outer layer, using programmed automation without
intermediate delays in spraying or in part handling.
Off-the-shelf plasma-spray equipment offers the capability of high coating-feedstock
throughput (3 kg/hr), and special high-power guns can achieve a feedstock (e.g., alumina)
throughput of over 25 kg/hr. Aside from normally spraying in air, it is possible, and
sometimes essential, to plasma spray in a reduced-pressure environment chamber.
Underwater spraying also is possible.
The plasma flame is maintained by a steady, continuous-arc discharge of flowing inert
gas, generally argon plus a small percentage of an enthalpy-enhancing diatomic gas,
such as hydrogen. Feedstock powder {10 to 70 μm diameter} is carried by an inert gas
into the emerging plasma flame. The particles melt in transit without vaporizing
excessively, are accelerated, and impinge on the substrate where they flatten and
solidify at cooling rates similar to those achieved in rapid-solidification processes.
Much of the heat contained within the particles being deposited, as well as the heat of
solidification and the heat of the plasma flame, is removed by conduction through the
substrate. Consequently, precautions must be taken to prevent thermal degradation of
substrate properties, or to prevent a metal substrate and/or coating from becoming
excessively oxidized. Both the substrate and coating contract upon cooling, which can
generate high residual stresses if a significant difference in coefficients of thermal
expansion exists; these stresses can lead to coating delamination.
While there are hundreds of parameters that influence the plasma-arc spraying process,
about 12 have been identified as having the strongest influence on coating properties
and the survivability of the coating system. Improved control of these parameters was
the focus of many developments that have occurred during the past few years, and is the
focus of many current developments. These include incorporating empirical or real-time
feedback looping, redesigning fundamental gun components and feedstock powders (e.g.
chemical composition, size distribution, and shape), and rethinking power-supply
design.
There also have been major changes in gas-handling equipment. Mass-flow control and
metering are replacing traditional analog gages, which enable digital output with feedback
potential. Data logging is gaining acceptance; flawed areas within a coating are now
attributable to an "event" in gas flow, for example. Similar control schemes
have been adopted for the powder-feed operation, including a variety of devices that
display instantaneous powder-feed rates. Powder feeders also have changed, with
fluidized-bed feeders becoming common; these feeders permit smooth flow (less pulsing)
of a wider range of powder types.
In the area of power supply, controlled de-power supply systems incorporating heat
exchangers have been designed specifically for use with plasma guns, and are becoming
the standard in the industry. And while not yet commonly practiced throughout the
industry, monitoring and logging current, voltage, cooling-system temperature at
various locations (including the gun), gas parameters, and feed rate is a relatively
straightforward task.
A revolutionary development in plasma-spray technology that occurred in the 1980s is
reduced-pressure atmosphere chamber spraying. Plasma spraying essentially in the absence
of oxygen allows the coating/substrate system to be maintained at a high temperature
during processing, resulting in interfacial diffusion, which produces a true metallurgical
bond.
Chamber plasma spraying is expected to be capable of producing coatings having unique
properties in a wide range of applications. For example, it is possible to chamber
spray refractory oxides to obtain fully dense, well-bonded coatings. It also is relatively
easy to add a high-temperature metal alloy to the oxide to obtain a composite having
good high-temperature wear resistance. Chamber spraying also can produce good coatings
of reactive metals, such as titanium and zirconium.
An extension of the technique involves spraying the interior of large pipes or tanks for
handling chemicals, using the vessel itself as a reduced-pressure inert-gas chamber by
excluding air during spraying. Enhanced coating characteristics (e.g., density and
adhesion strength) and accompanying improved coating properties achieved in chamber
spraying are related to increased particle velocity and the high temperature of the
coating/substrate system attained during spraying.
Another variation of chamber spraying is reverse-arc sputtering. The technique involves
electrically connecting the target substrate to the spray-gun system, which establishes
a transferred arc at the surface, thus effecting a highly efficient sputter-cleaning
process. This surface pretreatment combined with the high coating/substrate temperature
results in excellent coating adhesion.
Versatility through process variety
Combustion-flame spraying generally uses an oxyacetylene flame to melt and spray either
powder or wire feedstock. Due to its lower flame temperature and particle velocity
compared with plasma spraying, flame spraying produces a less dense coating having lower
adhesion strength. However, flame spraying is simpler in principle and operation, and
system and production costs are lower than for plasma spraying. An additional
consideration is the possible use of less-skilled operators because the process is more
forgiving.
Commercially available wire combustion flame guns can be used to spray virtually any
welding wire including composite wires.
A variation of combustion-flame spraying is the spray-and-fuse method of surface
hardening. This well-established technique enables flame-spray deposition of a
hard-facing material, for example, with subsequent flame fusing. Although the process
lacks some control, it is highly effective and is widely used.
The hypervelocity oxyfuel (HVOF) gun represents a major development in
thermal-spray technology. Developed by several companies to obtain well-bonded, dense
coatings, HVOF guns have in common a method to burn oxygen and fuel and carry the
combustion products through a nozzle with subsequent free expansion. This arrangement
results in hypersonic flame gas velocities, and by introducing the feedstock powder
"up-wind", powder particles attain high heat and supersonic velocities,
this permits particle flattening upon striking the substrate, thus forming a dense
coating. Special particle-size distributions are required for HVOF spraying, creating
challenges and significant opportunities for powder producers.
HVOF sprayed metallic coatings often have properties superior to those of plasma-sprayed
coatings, and equal to or superior to coatings produced using the detonation gun. The
aircraft industry is especially interested in the HVOF spraying process for producing
wear-resistant coatings. Refinements in the process are expected in the future, which
may extend its application into areas traditionally dominated by plasma spraying.
Two-wire, electric-arc spraying represents an important method to achieve low-cost
application of metallic coatings. Most welding wires can be electric-arc sprayed at
high throughput (from 30 to 50 kg/hr). During the process, two consumable wires,
through which an electric current is passed, form an electric arc at the point where
they intersect. The arc melts the wires and the molten metal is atomized by a continuous
flow of either high-velocity compressed air or nonoxidizing gases, such as carbon
dioxide, nitrogen, or argon.
Coatings formed using air atomization are relatively dense and have good adhesion. Those
formed using inert-gas atomization (which can be carried out in a reduced-pressure chamber)
are very dense and well-bonded to the substrate.
The Sonarc process combines two-wire, electric-arc and HVOF spraying; molten metal at
the arc is atomized and rapidly propelled to the substrate by the HVOF flame. The
introduction of hard reinforcement particles (e.g. alumina or silicon carbide) into the
flame makes it is possible to form either a metal-matrix composite coating or a
free-standing bulk shape. The high particle velocities attainable in the Sonarc
process result in extremely dense composite materials.
New powders create new opportunities
The enhanced quality and variety of feedstock powders is contributing significantly to
the advancement of thermal-spray technology. New processes are being used to economically
produce special metal-alloy and ceramic formulations (e.g. cemented chromium and tungsten
carbides). For example, GTE Products Corp. has developed a new microatomization process
in which metal is melted using a plasma torch and molten droplets are propelled at high
velocities against a rapidly rotating substrate. The droplets are fragmented and rapidly
solidified resulting in spherical powders tens of micrometers in diameter, which can be
used as feedstock for plasma and HVOF spraying. Spherical powders are especially necessary
in plasma and HVOF spraying to obtain even, nonpulsing powder injection into the flame.
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