Claims
- 1. In a flame spray method comprising the steps of:
- continuously combusting, under pressure, a continuous flow of an oxy-fuel mixture confined within an essentially closed internal burner combustion chamber,
- discharging the hot combustion product gases from the combustion chamber through a flow expansion nozzle as a high velocity hot gas stream, and
- feeding material to said stream for high temperature heat softening or liquefaction and spraying at high velocity onto a surface positioned in the path of the stream at the discharge end of the nozzle,
- the improvement wherein the step of feeding said material comprises introducing said material in solid form outside of said combustion chamber and axially into a converging flow of hot combustion product gases after exit from the combustion chamber while entering a converging portion of the flow expansion nozzle having a nozzle bore of a length that is at least five times that of the nozzle bore throat, to restrict the diameter of the column of particles passing through the nozzle bore, to prevent build-up of particle material on the nozzle bore wall while insuring sufficient particle dwell time within the bore to effect particle heat softening or melting and flow at supersonic flow velocity prior to impact against said surface.
- 2. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the step of discharging the hot combustion product gases from the combustion chamber through a flow expansion nozzle as a high velocity gas steam includes the step of minimizing the whirling velocity component of the gaseous flow through the flow expansion nozzle bore.
- 3. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the step of discharging the hot combustion product gases from the combustion chamber through a flow expansion nozzle as a high velocity gas stream comprises causing said gases to pass through said nozzle bore over a nozzle bore length of such an extent that the temperature of the hot gas flow is reduced to below the dissociation temperature of the gas flow.
- 4. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said step of discharging the hot combustion product gases from the combustion chamber through a flow expansion nozzles as a high velocity gas stream comprises passing said hot combustion product gases through a nozzle whose length is such that the particles discharged are still in their plastic state.
- 5. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1 further comprising the step of adding an inert gas to the reactants to reduce the combustion temperature.
- 6. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1, further comprising the step of adding compressed air to supply inert gas contained in the compressed air to the reactants to reduce the combustion temperature and to thereby prevent plugging of the nozzle bore by heat softening or molten material particles on the bore of the nozzle upstream of the exit end of the nozzle bore.
- 7. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said step of feeding said solid material into the flow of hot gases comprises the introduction of said solid material from a hole aligned with the axis of the nozzle bore upstream of the nozzle and at a point where the inlet flow of the hot gases to the nozzle bore throat has a radial velocity component which tends to restrict the diameter of a column of particles when said solid material is in particulate form and which maximizes heat transfer between the hot gases and the case of the rod when the solid material is in rod form and projects into the axis of the nozzle bore, through said hole.
- 8. The flame spray method as claimed in claim 1, wherein the pressure within the combustion chamber is maintained at least 75 PSIG.
- 9. A highly concentrated supersonic material flame spray apparatus comprises:
- a spray gun body,
- a high pressure essentially closed combustion chamber within said body,
- means for continuously flowing an oxy-fuel mixture under high pressure through said combustion chamber for ignition within said chamber,
- said body including combustion chamber products of combustion discharge passage means at one end thereof,
- said body further comprising an elongated nozzle downstream of said combustion chamber discharge passage means, said nozzle including a converging inlet bore portion leading to a throat and having an extended length outlet bore portion, and wherein said bore has a length that is at least five times the diameter of said nozzle bore throat,
- said combustion chamber discharge passage means comprising means for conveying a converging flow of the discharging hot products of combustion, after exit from the combustion chamber into the entrance of the nozzle inlet bore portion and means for introducing material in solid form outside of the combustion chamber axially into the hot combustion gases for subsequent heat softening or melting and acceleration with the point of introduction of the solid material being at the entrance to or within the converging inlet portion of the bore of said nozzle to restrict the diameter of the column of particles passing through the nozzle bore, prevent build-up of particle material on the nozzle bore wall while insuring sufficient particle dwell time within the gas stream to effect particle heat softening or melting prior to particle impact on a substrate downstream of the discharge end of the nozzle bore.
- 10. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9, wherein the axis of the nozzle bore and the axis of the combustion chamber are at approximately right angles to each other, said combustion chamber comprises an end wall, said combustion chamber discharge passage means comprises a plurality of circumferentially spaced converging, inclined small diameter passages within said combustion chamber end wall, being open at one end to the inlet portion of said nozzle bore upstream of the nozzle bore throat and at the other end to said combustion chamber, and wherein said means for introducing solid material into the hot gases comprises a small diameter material feed passage within said body centered within said circumferentially spaced, inclined passages which converge towards the axis of the bore, said material feed passage being coaxial with said nozzle bore.
- 11. The apparatus as claimed in claim 9, wherein said combustion chamber comprises an elongated cylindrical combustion chamber, and said body comprises a conical projection within said combustion chamber at approximately right angles to the axis of said combustion chamber and projecting towards and being coaxial with said nozzle bore, and wherein the tip of said conical projection terminates adjacent the end of said nozzle at said converging inlet portion and forms, with said nozzle, said combustion chamber discharge passage means, and wherein said solid material comprises an elongated wire or rod and said conical projection includes an axially extending small diameter bore, and said apparatus further comprises means for positively feeding said solid material wire or rod through the axial bore of said conical projection with the wire or rod opening to the throat of said nozzle at the tip end of said conical projection.
- 12. The apparatus as claimed in claim 10, wherein said plurality of circumferentially spaced converging, inclined small diameter passages for feeding the combustion chamber gases into the nozzle bore are oriented to eliminate tangential flow into said nozzle bore for minimizing the whirling velocity component of the gaseous flow through the nozzle bore.
- 13. The apparatus as claimed in claim 12, wherein said plurality of circumferentially spaced converging, inclined small diameter passages are coplanar with the axis of said nozzle bore.
- 14. The apparatus as claimed in claim 13, wherein the nozzle bore length is the maximum length in which particle build up is not effected on the inner bore surface.
- 15. The apparatus as claimed in claim 13, wherein the nozzle bore is the minimum length in which the temperature of the hot gas flow is reduced to below the dissociation temperature of the gas flow.
- 16. The apparatus as claimed in claim 13, wherein the nozzle length is such that the particle velocity is maximized at the exit plane of the nozzle.
- 17. The apparatus as claimed in claim 13, wherein the nozzle length is such that the particle temperature is maximized at the exit plane of the nozzle.
Parent Case Info
This application is a continuation-in-part application of application Ser. No. 196,723 filed Oct. 9, 1980, entitled "Highly Concentrated Supersonic Liquified Material Flame Spray Method and Apparatus", now abandoned.
US Referenced Citations (8)
Foreign Referenced Citations (7)
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811899 |
Jun 1951 |
DEX |
953864 |
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FRX |
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Continuation in Parts (1)
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Number |
Date |
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Parent |
196723 |
Oct 1980 |
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