Priority is claimed to Swiss Patent Application No. CH 00103/07, filed Jan. 23, 2007, the entire disclosure of which is incorporated by reference.
The present invention relates generally to the field of thermal machine, and more particularly to a method for treating a thermally loaded component having a metallic substrate and a protective coating on at least a portion of an outer side.
Thermally loaded components of gas turbines, such as stator blades or rotor blades or elements of the associated combustion chamber, which on account of the high operating temperatures are produced from Ni-based alloys, are frequently coated on the surface with a ceramic thermal barrier coating (TBC). When applying these thermal barrier coatings, local defects can occur, which are not acceptable with regard to later application, or which have to be removed for other reasons. If such local defects occur, the whole thermal barrier coating, inclusive of the bonding layer which lies beneath it, currently has to be removed by means of a chemical and/or combined chemical/mechanical removal process. This chemical process is very burdensome and costly, and requires greater finish-machining. Also, it is not possible to selectively remove only areas of the protective coating in order to finish used components, for example, for renewed application.
It would be desirable to have available a less costly and locally applicable process by which only the protective coating or thermal barrier coating of such a component can be purposefully removed.
From the prior art, different methods for local removal of ceramic coatings are already known (see, for example, the publications US-A1-2005/0126001, US-A1-2004/0244910, WO-A1-02/103088, WO-A1-2005/083158, DE-A1-10 2004 009 757, US-A1-2004/0115447, US-A1-2004/0256504, US-A1-2003/0100242 and DE-B4-103 60 063). Other methods for local repair of coating systems are known from the publications US-A1-2002/0164417, DE-T2-601, 03 612, US-A1-2003/0101687, EP-A1-1 304 446, EP-A1-0 808 913 and US-B1-6, 235, 352.
The complete removal of thermal barrier coatings by means of chemical methods alone, or in combination with other methods, have been handled in a different way in the publications DE-A1-10 2004 049 825, US-A1-2001/0009246, US-A1-2001/0009247 and EP-B1-1 076 114.
Furthermore, it is known (Fr.-W. Bach et al., “Abtragen von thermisch gespritzten Schichten mit dem Trockeneis-Laserstrahl”, GTS-Strahl Vol. 14, September 2004; Fr.-W. Bach et al., “Dry ice blasting and water jet processes for the removal of thermal sprayed coatings”, Conf. Proc. ITSC 2005, Basle, p. 1542-1548 (2005)) to remove protective coatings, such as thermal barrier coatings, which are on components, by means of a dry ice blasting process.
With this type of coating removal, however, the complete removal of the coating on the one hand, and the least possible influencing of the metallic coatings (either the metal substrate as such, or the metallic bonding layer or adhesion mediating coating which lies above it) which lies beneath the coating which is to be removed on the other hand, is problematic. Previous processes suffer from low efficiency or very long treatment durations.
It is an object of the invention to provide a method for removing such protective coatings or thermal barrier coatings, which utilize the advantages of the dry ice blasting process without being encumbered with its disadvantages.
The present invention provides a method for treating a thermally loaded component having a metallic substrate areally coated with a protective coating on a at least a portion of an outer side. The method includes removing the protective coating from the substrate using a dry ice blasting process, wherein, before the application of the dry ice blasting process the protective coating is first of all predamaged in a first step in such a way that the predamaging leads to an increase of the efficiency of the removal process.
The invention thus provides a two-stage treatment process, in which before the application of the dry ice blasting process the protective coating is first of all purposefully predamaged in a first step. By means of the purposeful predamaging of the coating which is to be removed, this can be more effectively, i.e. in shorter time, completely removed in the subsequent dry ice blasting process and without greater influence upon possible metal coatings which lie beneath it.
A development of the invention is characterized in that cracks are created in the protective coating for predamaging the protective coating, or the component is locally heated, or heated as a whole, to a temperature far above room temperature.
For this purpose, the component can be locally heated, or heated as a whole, by means of a burner, a plasma jet or a laser jet. Furthermore, heating of the whole component, for example in an oven, is possible. If the component has a substrate consisting of an Ni-based or Co-based alloy, it can be heated up as a whole to a temperature of up to 600° C.
Alternatively or additionally to heating up, the protective coating, however, can also be shot-peened for creating cracks or creating predamage, wherein steel balls, with a diameter of between 0.5 and 5 mm, are preferably used, and for blast formation the steel balls are introduced into a high-speed gas flow, especially consisting of compressed air. The use of ceramic balls is also conceivable.
During the subsequent dry ice blasting, dry ice grains consisting of carbon dioxide at a temperature of about −78° C. are preferably used. In particular, the dry ice grains consist of compressed carbon dioxide snow and have a diameter of between 1 and 3.5 mm and a length of between 2 and 10 mm.
It is especially favorable if the dry ice grains are accelerated to speeds of about 300 m/s in a compressed air flow, before striking the predamaged protective coating.
According to another development of the invention, there is a thermally grown oxide coating directly beneath the protective coating, and the thermally grown oxide coating is removed together with the protective coating.
A bonding layer can be provided between the substrate and protective coating; the protective coating can then be removed down to the bonding layer.
The component to be treated preferably has a substrate consisting of an Ni-based alloy, and the protective coating is a ceramic thermal barrier coating, especially consisting of yttrium-stabilized zirconium oxide.
The component can preferably be a stator blade or rotor blade of a gas turbine, or a protective segment of the combustion chamber of an internal combustion engine.
The invention is subsequently explained in more detail with reference to exemplary embodiments in conjunction with the drawings, in which:
The present invention refers to a method for removing a brittle coating system (protective coating 12 in
In the case of used components, which were already subjected to a longer thermal loading in the presence of oxygen, a thermally grown oxide coating (13 in
The coating system which is on the substrate 11, however, can also comprise at least one intermediate coating in the form of a bonding layer 22 (
The advantage of the method according to the invention is that the brittle protective coating 12 can be completely removed without it happening to the metallic coating which lies beneath it, whether it be the substrate 11 itself (
A two-stage process is essential for the method according to the invention: in a first step, the coating which is to be removed is predamaged by means of a suitable pretreatment. The predamaging achieves the effect of the coating then being able to be more easily and completely removed in a second step. The predamaging of the protective coating can be carried out either by means of a heat treatment of the component, or by means of a mechanical action on the coating by means of a shot-peening process, or by means of a combination of the two methods. For the actual removal of the (predamaged) coating, a dry ice blasting process is used, in which a jet of greatly accelerated dry ice grains is directed onto the coating surface, and there, acts on the one hand mechanically and on the other hand thermally (by means of shock cooling) on the coating.
The two-stage process is necessary because just by the dry ice blasting process, i.e. without predamaging the coating, residues of the coating remain on the component which then hinders finishing of the component. The predamaging of the coating, therefore, effectively prevents coating residues remaining on the component surface and increases the efficiency or reduces the process duration.
According to
For predamaging the protective coating 12, the components 10, 10′ are now subjected to a thermal treatment at temperatures T far above room temperature TR (
The thermal treatment (for the component 10, 10′ as a whole) can be undertaken in an oven, or by means of local heating with a burner, a plasma jet or a laser jet. If the substrate 11 is produced from an Ni-based alloy, the thermal treatment can be carried out at temperatures of up to 600° C. On account of the different thermal expansion coefficients of the substrate material and of the protective coating material, according to
For implementing the shot-peening process, according to
After the predamaging of the protective coating 12 which is created in this way in the first step, the predamaged protective coating 12 is completely removed in the second step (
The dry ice blasting process acts upon the protective coating 12 by means of a combination of mechanical and thermal mechanisms: the kinetic energy of the blast medium, on account of shock waves on the interface between protective coating 12 and substrate 11 creates further cracks and removes particles of the protective coating 12 which are already blasted off, or which have only poor adhesion to the coating.
During impact of the dry ice grains 21, some of the kinetic and thermal energy is converted into sublimation energy. The volume of the solid carbon dioxide grows by a factor of up to 700. Large pressure gradients on the surface of the protective coating 12 result from it. The gaseous carbon dioxide can be drawn off together with the blasted off particles of the coating and, after filtering, can be let out into the environment without producing further waste.
A very thin surface layer of the protective coating 12 is cooled down at high cooling speed to −50° C., wherein thermal stresses are created, which, in the case of large differences in the thermal expansion coefficients between substrate 11 and protective coating 12, are particularly large. These thermal stresses also lead to cracks 17 in the protective coating 12, weaken these further, and promote delamination. Since dry ice, comparable with gypsum, is rather soft, there is practically no abrasive effect. Consequently, the protective coating 12 can be removed without the metallic coating which lies beneath it being damaged, even if it consists of mild steel or high-grade steel, nickel alloys or even aluminum alloys.
By means of the dry ice blasting process, the protective coating is completely removed in the case of a new component 10, and the thermally grown oxide coating 13 (
With thermally loaded components, a metallic bonding layer 22 (for example MCrAlY), or an aluminum layer or PtAl layer (
With this type of coating, exactly the same procedure is also followed as with components without a bonding layer.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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00103/07 | Jan 2007 | CH | national |