Claims
- 1. In a plasma-arc torch comprising a cylindrical casing forming a chamber and having a first, electrically conductive end wall including an extended length nozzle bore defining an anode nozzle passage extending axially therethrough and forming an anode electrode and a second, opposite end wall, a cathode electrode mounted coaxially within the opposite end wall of the cylindrical casing and being electrically insulated from said first end wall and terminating short thereof, said anode nozzle passage at its end facing said cathode electrode flaring outwardly and being conically enlarged, means for introducing a plasma producing gas under pressure into the chamber defined by said cylindrical casing, said cathode electrode and said end walls, and means for creating an electrical potential difference between said cathode electrode and said first end wall constituting said anode nozzle to create a plasma arc flame normally exiting from said anode nozzle passage, and with an anode foot normally constituted by a circumferential metal ring surrounding the nozzle exit orifice, the improvement comprising:
- a surface discontinuity at a point along the nozzle bore, sufficiently upstream of said nozzle exit orifice and of sufficient size to cause the arc to pass to the anode nozzle passage wall in the vicinity of the discontinuity, thereby establishing an arc column which, with a downstream ionized region is maintained wholly within the extended length nozzle bore, thereby extending the life of the circumferential anode region, in the vicinity of the exit of the nozzle of the plasma torch while yielding full control over arc-length characteristics, wherein said means for introducing said plasma producing gas under pressure into said chamber comprises means for feeding said gas tangentially into the end of the chamber remote from said anode nozzle passage to establish a vortex flow of gas exhibiting a low pressure core extending through the anode nozzle passage and with said core establishing a small diameter arc column extending partially through said nozzle passage such that the boundary layer of the vortex flow of gas along the anode nozzle passage wall provides a path for the arc to pass directly to the anode nozzle passage wall at, or just downstream of the disturbance zone provided by the nozzle passage wall surface discontinuity, and further comprising means for introducing a material to be sprayed into a high-velocity, essentially ion-free hot gas stream downstream of the arc column and its downstream ionized region, at significantly lower temperature that of said arc column and its downstream ionized region, thereby eliminating excessive heating of the particles sprayed by the torch.
- 2. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 1, wherein a counterbore extends along a portion of the nozzle axis from the nozzle exit axially inwardly and forms a radial shoulder with the main bore of the anode nozzle with the radial shoulder constituting said discontinuity.
- 3. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 2, wherein the counterbore has a diameter which is less than 25% in excess of the diameter of the nozzle bore.
- 4. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 2, wherein the counterbore has a diameter less than 40% in excess of the diameter of the nozzle bore, and wherein the axial position of the radial shoulder is chosen to define a predetermined desired arc voltage for the arc between the cathode electrode and the anode nozzle at the radial shoulder.
- 5. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 1, wherein a shallow annular groove is machined into the anode nozzle bore of sufficient depth and width to form said surface discontinuity at an axial position sufficiently upstream of the anode nozzle passage exit to insure arc passage to the anode wall within the anode nozzle bore.
- 6. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 1, wherein said anode nozzle passage has a nozzle bore of reduced diameter over a short axial section upstream from the nozzle exit and forming a radial shoulder with the nozzle bore facing upstream thereof and constituting said surface discontinuity.
- 7. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 1, wherein said anode nozzle bore has a radially inwardly projecting ring over a short axial length, upstream from said nozzle exit and constituting said surface discontinuity.
- 8. The plasma-arc torch as claimed in claim 7, further comprising a reduced diameter nozzle bore section positioned between the terminus of the arc column and/or its associated downstream ionized region and said means for introducing the material to be sprayed, and wherein said reduced diameter nozzle bore section forms a nozzle throat of an expansion nozzle functioning to produce a supersonic jet stream at the nozzle exit.
- 9. In a method of operating a plasma-arc torch having a cylindrical casing and having a first, electrically conductive end wall including an extended length nozzle bore defining an anode nozzle passage extending axially therethrough and forming an anode electrode and a second, opposite end wall, a cathode electrode mounted coaxially within the opposite end wall of the cylindrical casing and being electrically insulated from said first end wall and terminating short thereof, said anode nozzle passage at its end facing said cathode electrode flaring outwardly and being conically enlarged, said method comprising the steps of:
- introducing a plasma producing gas under pressure into said chamber and creating an electrical potential difference between the cathode electrode and said anode nozzle to create a plasma-arc flame normally exiting from said anode nozzle passage, the improvement comprising;
- placing a discontinuity at a point along the extended length nozzle bore sufficiently upstream of said nozzle exit orifice and of sufficient size to cause one arc to pass to the anode nozzle passage wall in the vicinity of the discontinuity thereby establishing an arc column which, with downstream ionized region, is maintained wholly within the extended length nozzle bore, thereby extending the life of the circumferential anode region in the vicinity of the exit of the anode nozzle, while yielding full control over the arc-length characteristics, and
- introducing particles to be sprayed at a point within said plasma-arc flame downstream of said arc column with its downstream ionized region at an area of said plasma-arc flame in the form of a high velocity hot gas stream exhibiting no ionization with said particles accelerated to extreme velocity for impact against a workpiece surface to be coated, thereby eliminating excessive heating of the particles prior to impact.
- 10. The method as claimed in claim 9, wherein the position of the surface discontinuity is chosen to select the predetermined desired arc voltage between the anode and the cathode.
- 11. The method as claimed in claim 10, further comprising the steps of causing said high velocity hot gas stream exhibiting no ionization, to pass through a reduced diameter nozzle bore section downstream of the terminus of the arc column and/or its associated ionized region and upstream of the injection point of the particles to be sprayed and expanding the hot gas stream within an expanding nozzle bore portion downstream of said reduced diameter nozzle bore section forming a nozzle throat, to produce a supersonic jet stream exiting from the end of the extended length nozzle bore.
Parent Case Info
This invention is a continuation-in-part application of Application Ser. No. 024,485, filed Mar. 11, 1987, now U.S. Pat. No. 4,788,402 to the applicant and entitled "HIGH POWER EXTENDED ARC PLASMA SPRAY METHOD AND APPARATUS".
US Referenced Citations (7)
Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
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Parent |
24485 |
Mar 1987 |
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