Plasma Spray

Plasma Spray

Plasma spraying, a method of thermal spraying, is a materials processing technique for producing coatings and free-standing parts using a plasma jet. Deposits having thickness from micrometers to several millimeters can be produced from a variety of materials, including metals, ceramics, polymers and composites.

How it works

The material to be deposited (feedstock) — typically as a powder, sometimes as a liquid, suspension or wire — is introduced into the plasma jet, emanating from a plasma torch. In the jet, where the temperature is on the order of 10,000K, the material is melted and propelled towards a substrate. There, the molten droplets flatten, rapidly solidify and form a deposit. Commonly, the deposits remain adherent to the substrate as coatings; free-standing parts can also be produced by removing the substrate.There are a large number of technological parameters that influence the interaction of the particles with the plasma jet and the substrate and therefore the deposit properties. These parameters include feedstock type, plasma gas composition and flow rate, energy input, torch offset distance, substrate cooling, etc.

Deposit properties

The deposits consist of a multitude of pancake-like lamellae called 'splats', formed by flattening of the liquid droplets. As the feedstock powders typically have sizes from micrometers to above 100 micrometers, the lamellae have thickness in the micrometer range and lateral dimension from several to hundreds of micrometers. Between these lamellae, there are small voids, such as pores, cracks and regions of incomplete bonding. As a result of this unique structure, the deposits can have properties significantly different from bulk materials. These are generally mechanical properties, such as lower strength and modulus, higher strain tolerance, and lower thermal and electrical conductivity. Also, due to the rapid solidification, metastable phases can be present in the deposits.The first vacuum plasma spray unit in the UK was installed by Professor T. W. Clyne at the Department of Materials Science & Metallurgy at the University of Cambridge.

Applications

This technique is mostly used to produce coatings on structural materials. Such coatings provide protection against high temperatures, corrosion, erosion, wear; they can also change the appearance, electrical or tribological properties of the surface, replace worn material, etc. When sprayed on substrates of various shapes and removed, free-standing parts in the form of plates, tubes, shells, etc. can be produced. It can be also used for powder processing (spheroidization, homogenization, modification of chemistry, etc.). In that case, the substrate for deposition is absent and the particles solidify during flight or in a controlled environment (e.g., water).

Properties of zirconia-based plasma-sprayed coatings

Thermal conductivity = 0.7-0.9 W/m/K
In-plane stiffness = 17-21 GPa
Porosity = 10-14 %

Wire arc spray

Wire arc spray is a form of plasma spraying where two consumable metal wires are fed independently into the spray gun. These wires are then charged and an arc generated between then. The heat from this arc melts the incoming wire which is then entrained in air jet from the gun and this entrained molten feedstock is then deposited onto a substrate. Used commonly in metallic, heavy coatings.

ee also

*Vacuum plasmaspraying
*Solution precursor plasma spray
* [http://www.mechanicalengineering.cc/mechanical-engineering-archives/50-HARD-COATING-WITH-THERMAL-SPRAYING.html Hard Coating with Thermal Spraying]

References


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем сделать НИР

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Solution precursor plasma spray — (SPPS) is a thermal spray process where a feedstock solution is heated and then deposited onto a substrate. Basic properties of the process are fundamentally similar to other plasma spraying processes. However, instead of injecting a powder into… …   Wikipedia

  • Suspension Plasma Spray — In materials engineering, Suspension Plasma Spray (SPS) is a form of plasma spraying where the ceramic feedstock is dispersed in a liquid suspension before being injected into the plasma jet.By suspending powder in a fluid, normal feeding… …   Wikipedia

  • plasma spray process — The process in which a very high temperature flame is produced by blowing gas through an electric arc. Metal wire or powder is melted by passage through the flame and is projected on the surface to be coated …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • Plasma (physics) — For other uses, see Plasma. Plasma lamp, illustrating some of the more complex phenomena of a plasma, including filamentation. The colors are a result of relaxation of electrons in excited states to lower energy states after they have recombined… …   Wikipedia

  • spray — See dry spray gravity feed spray gun plasma spray process pressure feed spray gun split spray …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • spray process — See plasma spray process …   Dictionary of automotive terms

  • Spray forming — Spray forming, also known as spray casting, spray deposition[1] and in situ compaction,[2] is a method of casting near net shape metal components with homogeneous microstructures via the deposition of semi solid sprayed droplets onto a shaped… …   Wikipedia

  • Inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry — ICP MS Instrument Acronym ICP MS Classification Mass spectrometry Analytes atomic and polyatomic species in plasma, with exceptions; usually inte …   Wikipedia

  • Gas dynamic cold spray — is a coating deposition method developed in the mid 1980s in the Soviet Union in The Institute of Theoretical and Applied Mechanics by Papyrin and his team. The solid powders (1 to 50 micrometers in diameter) are accelerated in supersonic gas… …   Wikipedia

  • Thermal barrier coating — Thermal barrier coatings are highly advanced material systems applied to metallic surfaces, such as gas turbine or aero engine parts, operating at elevated temperatures. These coatings serve to insulate metallic components from large and… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”