The described embodiments relate generally to surface finishes for materials. More particularly, the described embodiments relate to abrasion resistant cosmetic surface finishes for metal parts, such as for a consumer device housing.
Anodizing is a common method of providing an anodic oxide coating on a metal substrate, often used in industry to provide a protective and sometimes cosmetically appealing coating to metal parts. During an anodizing process, a portion of the metal substrate is converted to a metal oxide, thereby forming a protective oxide layer or coating. The nature of the anodic oxide coatings can depend on a number of factors, including chemical makeup of the metal substrates and the process parameters used in the anodizing processes. Anodizing can be a particularly useful technique to preserve surface finishes on the exterior of a consumer device, particularly with respect to soft metals that scratch or dent easily, such as aluminum.
Titanium is a relatively hard metal for which anodizing to create a protective layer is not common, however, since a typical oxide layer forming at a titanium surface tends to be too thin to provide much protection. Rather, titanium and its alloys are often subjected to nitriding, carburizing, carbo-nitriding, nitro-carburizing, or similar processes in order to harden its surfaces to provide a protective surface finish, which can be extremely hard and ceramic in nature. These processes are also sometimes used for cosmetic purposes, since they can sometimes result in color changes. For example, the gold appearance of titanium nitride is often selected for cosmetic reasons. These processes can be limiting, however, and it is generally not common for a very hard nitrided or carburized titanium surface to be further treated in a cosmetic manner.
While metal surface finish processes are known to have worked well in the past, there can be room for improvement. Accordingly, there is a need for improved systems and methods that provide durable and aesthetically pleasing metallic surface finishes for consumer devices.
Representative embodiments set forth herein include various structures, methods, and features thereof for the disclosed durable cosmetic metal surface finishes. In particular, the disclosed embodiments set forth systems and methods for providing abrasion resistant and cosmetically appealing variably colored surface finishes for titanium components.
According to various embodiments, the disclosed systems and methods can provide durable metal surface finishes in a cosmetically appealing manner. An exemplary method of providing a surface finish to a metal part can include at least: 1) diffusion hardening a surface of the metal part until it becomes a hardened surface layer, and 2) oxidizing the diffusion-hardened surface layer to create an oxide coating thereon. The diffusion-hardened surface layer might be a ceramic and can be harder than an internal region of the metal part, and the oxide coating can have a color that is different from the metal or surface layer, the color being unachievable only by diffusion hardening or only by oxidizing.
In various embodiments, the metal can be titanium or a titanium alloy. The diffusion hardening can include carburizing, nitriding, boriding, or any combination thereof. Oxidizing can include electrochemical oxidization, such as anodizing or micro arc oxidation. The oxide layer thickness can be controlled via the amount of voltage applied during oxidation, with the oxide coating color being a function of the thickness. A broader range of brighter colors can be realized for the final surface (oxide coating). An enhanced hardness depth profile can extend to a depth of at least 20 microns below the oxide coating to provide a more durable surface finish.
This Summary is provided merely for purposes of summarizing some example embodiments so as to provide a basic understanding of some aspects of the subject matter described herein. Accordingly, it will be appreciated that the above-described features are merely examples and should not be construed to narrow the scope or spirit of the subject matter described herein in any way. Other features, aspects, and advantages of the subject matter described will become apparent from the following Detailed Description, Figures, and Claims.
Other aspects and advantages of the embodiments described herein will become apparent from the following detailed description taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings which illustrate, by way of example, the principles of the described embodiments.
The included drawings are for illustrative purposes and serve only to provide examples of possible structures and methods for the disclosed durable cosmetic metal surface finishes. These drawings in no way limit any changes in form and detail that may be made to the embodiments by one skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the embodiments. The embodiments will be readily understood by the following detailed description in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, wherein like reference numerals designate like structural elements.
Anodizing, oxidizing, nitriding, carburizing, and the like are all known ways of forming surface finishes on metal components, with different approaches and parameters being used depending upon the types of metal, cost considerations, other circumstances, and surface finishes desired. While various metal surface finish processes are known to have worked well in the past, there is often a need for improved methods for providing increasingly durable and aesthetically pleasing cosmetic metallic surface finishes, such as for consumer devices.
According to various embodiments, the disclosed systems and methods can provide abrasion resistant metal surface finishes in a cosmetically appealing manner. An exemplary method of providing a surface finish to a metal part can include diffusion hardening a metal surface of the metal part until it becomes a diffusion-hardened surface layer, and then oxidizing the diffusion-hardened surface layer to create a relatively thin oxide coating thereon. The diffusion-hardened surface layer might be a ceramic and can be harder than an internal region of the metal part, and the oxide coating can have a new color that is different from the original metal color or the ceramic or other diffusion-hardened layer color. This new color can be one that is not achievable only by diffusion hardening or only by oxidizing the original metal surface.
In some disclosed embodiments, benefits of nitriding or carburizing are combined with benefits of electrochemical oxidation techniques to form coatings of more varied and precisely controlled cosmetics, which also have improved durability against abrasive wear. In specific embodiments, surface treatments for titanium and its alloys provide both improved abrasion resistance, by increasing surface hardness, and control of surface color.
In various embodiments, the metal can be titanium or a titanium alloy. The diffusion hardening includes carburizing, nitriding, carbonitriding, nitrocarburizing, boriding, or any combination thereof. The diffusion-hardened surface layer can include titanium nitride and/or titanium carbide, and can have a Vickers hardness of greater than 2000. Importantly, the diffusion-hardened surface, which might be all or at least partially ceramic, can retain some amount of electrical conductivity, such that the oxidizing can include electrochemical oxidization, such as anodizing or micro arc oxidation. The oxide layer thickness can be controlled via the amount of voltage applied during oxidation, with the oxide coating color being a function of the thickness. A broader range of colors and brighter overall colors can be realized for the final surface finish atop the oxide coating. The oxide coating can provide a more durable surface finish than a surface finish formed only by the diffusion hardening or only by the oxidizing. Further, the oxide coating, diffusion-hardened surface layer, and internal region of the metal part can together define a hardness depth profile having a greater peak hardness than is achievable by oxidization alone, and an enhanced hardness to a depth of at least 20 microns below the top of the oxide coating.
In various further embodiments, a metal part can have a surface finish formed by a process comprising any of the foregoing methods involving diffusion hardening a metal surface to form a diffusion-hardened surface layer and then oxidizing the surface layer to create an oxide coating, as well as any combination of the various details thereof. Again, various new properties can be realized in metal parts formed by these processes, with such properties including different surface colors, different hardness depth profiles and augmented hardness extending to further depths, and more durable surface finishes. In still further embodiments, a metal part can be formed from a titanium or titanium alloy, with the metal part having an oxide coating formed atop a diffusion-hardened layer of titanium nitride or titanium carbide that is in turn formed atop an internal region of the metal part. The oxide coating, diffusion-hardened layer, and internal region of the metal part can define a depth profile of hardness that includes a peak hardness of over 2000 Vickers hardness at the top of the diffusion-hardened layer to over 450 Vickers hardness at a depth of at least 20 microns below the top of the oxide coating, and/or the oxide coating can have a color that is different than any color that is achievable for any metal part surface formed from pure titanium, titanium alloy, titanium nitride, titanium carbide, or titanium oxide.
The foregoing approaches provide various methods, components, and features for the disclosed abrasion resistant cosmetic metal surface finishes. A more detailed discussion of these methods, components, and features thereof is set forth below and described in conjunction with
It will be understood that the various methods, components, and features disclosed herein may be applied for surface treatments on several different types of metals. For purposes of discussion, reference is specifically made to titanium or titanium alloys, which can include, for example, Ti6Al4V or “Titanium Grade 5” (hereinafter “Ti64”). Other alloy compositions and other metals may also be used in place of titanium or titanium alloys in various applications of the disclosed surface treatments and abrasion resistant cosmetic metal surface finishes, particularly alloys which are readily anodisable or oxidisable in a precisely controlled manner—even if only traditionally to the extent of forming thin-film oxides in the interference-coloring range of thickness (i.e., 100s of nm). As some non-limiting examples, the disclosed surface treatments might also be applied to aluminum, magnesium, zirconium, niobium, tantalum, and/or alloys thereof, in addition to titanium, Ti64, or other titanium alloys. Even stainless steel, where thin-film oxides may be used to color the surface through temper-annealing, as yet another example, may be treated in the various ways set forth herein.
Turning first to
In various embodiments, the oxidation process can be a conventional titanium anodizing process where thin oxide films or coatings are grown by immersing the part in an electrolyte, such as phosphoric or sulfuric acid, and supplying electrical current under a positive potential. These thin oxide films or coatings can have a thickness on the order of tens of nanometers to several microns, and the thickness can be dependent on the applied voltage that is used for coating formation. For the thinner oxide films, the color of the film or coating also varies with its thickness due to optical interference between light reflected from the oxide film outer surface and the oxide/metal interface, as will be readily appreciated.
In the absence of any prior nitriding or carburizing operation, the color of the oxide coating would be a certain function of coating thickness, progressively varying from gold to purple, to blue, to green, as set forth in
In some embodiments, a micro arc oxidation can be used to generate an oxide film. This surface treatment is generally conducted at higher potentials than conventional anodizing, and involves localized plasma discharges that help to convert the growing film or coating into crystalline phases, which also enables higher thicknesses to be formed. The oxide coating that result from a micro arc oxidation process is opaque and typically of a brown or gray color, which can be determined by the exact alloy composition. With its enhanced hardness and thicknesses of several microns to tens of microns, an oxide coating formed by a micro arc oxidation process can offer significantly enhanced surface protection in its own right. Again, however, the hardness due to this oxidation treatment is limited to the oxide layer itself. The underlying metal remains relatively soft and easily deformed. As a relatively brittle film, the oxide is thus susceptible to spallation when there is significant plastic deformation of the underlying metal, such as when the surface is subjected to impacts. Accordingly, the micro arc oxidation processes disclosed herein can be applied to previously nitrided, carburized, or nitrocarburized titanium articles, such that the metal substrate shows enhanced hardness to a greater depth. This offers both greater resistance to plastic deformation, and also protects the hard, brittle oxide coating from adhesive failures under certain applied stresses, such as sudden impacts and the like. The resulting surface finish is thus more mechanically robust than that of an article subjected to micro arc oxidation processing alone. Furthermore, the color of the resulting oxide film may also be adjusted to a wider spectrum of colors than is achievable by a micro arc oxidation process alone.
Moving next to
A representative plot of an exemplary enhanced hardness depth profile for a surface region treated in the manner provided herein is shown to the right of the metal part surface region 302. Because the formation of the hardened layer 320 can be accomplished using a diffusion process, the hardness of this layer, and the overall metal part surface region 302, can transition in a gradual manner from a maximum of over 2000 HV at the top of the hardened layer 320 to a minimum of about 290-350 HV for pure or solid Ti64 at the metal alloy region 310. Advantageously, the hardness can exceed 450 HV or more for a significant depth of the metal part surface region 302. As shown, this enhanced hardness gradient can extend to a depth of at least 20 microns below the surface, and up to about 50 microns or more below the surface in some cases.
The disclosed process provides an overall surface finish that is not only extremely hard at the actual surface, and thus scratch and abrasion resistant, but also a surface region that does not maintain this extreme hardness and corresponding brittleness to a considerable depth, which otherwise could result in a tendency to be brittle and chip or crack. In fact, the hardness of the overall metal part surface region 302 advantageously does not stay extremely hard or drop precipitously with depth, but rather only gradually tapers off to the 290-350 HV thickness of the inner pure metal or alloy. This provides a superior and durable surface finish compared to one that stays too hard and correspondingly brittle, or to one that quickly becomes too soft at a short depth beneath the surface. The disclosed surface processing including a combination of a diffusion hardening process followed by an oxidation process thus results in a more durable surface finish than a surface finish that would be formed only by the diffusion hardening process alone or only by the oxidizing process alone.
Turning next to
At a following optional process step 606, a selection of a desired surface color can take place. As noted above, a wide variety of surface colors are possible when implementing the disclosed methods for providing a surface finish to a metal part. Where selection of a desired surface color is made, then a subsequent optional process step 608 can involve calculating a specific oxide coating thickness that will result in the selected color, upon which an oxidation voltage can also be calculated to result in the specific oxide coating thickness. An oxidizer can then be set to the calculated voltage at a following optional process step 610. At a final process step 612, the diffusion-hardened or otherwise hardened surface layer can be oxidized to create an oxide coating on the surface layer. As in the foregoing embodiments, this oxidizing step can involve an electrochemical oxidization, such as anodizing or micro arc oxidizing. Also, the oxide coating can have a second color that is different than the first color, and this second color can be a color that is unachievable only by the diffusion hardening step alone or only by the oxidizing step alone. Where the voltage has been set to a particular value, the second color should be one that has been selected prior to the oxidation process.
For the foregoing flowchart, it will be readily appreciated that not every step provided is always necessary, and that further steps not set forth herein may also be included. For example, added steps that involve designing specific colors or color patterns by way of differing oxidizing voltages may be added. Also, steps that provide more detail with respect to the exact type of diffusion hardening may also be added. Other steps not included may also involve steps and procedures to deal with the mass production of metal parts, such as for consumer devices. Furthermore, the exact order of steps may be altered as desired, and some steps may be performed simultaneously. For example, steps 608 and 610 may be performed simultaneously in some embodiments.
The computing device 700 can also include a storage device 740, which can comprise a single disk or a plurality of disks (e.g., hard drives), and includes a storage management module that manages one or more partitions within the storage device 740. In some embodiments, storage device 740 can include flash memory, semiconductor (solid state) memory or the like. The computing device 700 can also include a Random Access Memory (RAM) 720 and a Read-Only Memory (ROM) 722. The ROM 722 can store programs, utilities or processes to be executed in a non-volatile manner. The RAM 720 can provide volatile data storage, and stores instructions related to the operation of the computing device 700.
The various aspects, embodiments, implementations or features of the described embodiments can be used separately or in any combination. Various aspects of the described embodiments can be implemented by software, hardware or a combination of hardware and software. The described embodiments can also be embodied as computer readable code on a computer readable medium. The computer readable medium is any data storage device that can store data which can thereafter be read by a computer system. Examples of the computer readable medium include read-only memory, random-access memory, CD-ROMs, DVDs, magnetic tape, hard disk drives, solid state drives, and optical data storage devices. The computer readable medium can also be distributed over network-coupled computer systems so that the computer readable code is stored and executed in a distributed fashion.
The foregoing description, for purposes of explanation, uses specific nomenclature to provide a thorough understanding of the described embodiments. However, it will be apparent to one skilled in the art that the specific details are not required in order to practice the described embodiments. Thus, the foregoing descriptions of specific embodiments are presented for purposes of illustration and description. They are not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the described embodiments to the precise forms disclosed. It will be apparent to one of ordinary skill in the art that many modifications and variations are possible in view of the above teachings.
This application claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 62/234,946, filed on Sep. 30, 2015, which application is incorporated by reference herein in its entirety and for all purposes.
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