The present invention relates to methods and apparatus for making coatings and articles from various material compositions involving use of electrostatic spray as the core method of coating deposition. These coatings may be used for a variety of applications, including as examples: abrasion-resistant coatings for cutting tools and wear parts, solid lubricant coatings for tools and wear parts, bio-friendly or biocidal coatings for biomedical implants, and thin film coatings for microelectronics, among others. Using the processes and equipment designs described in the detailed description section hereof, coatings may be applied to many different substrate materials and parts having simple or complex 3-dimensional geometries.
U.S. Pat. No. 6,607,782 issued Aug. 19, 2003 to Ajay P. Malshe, et al., disclosed a method that uses electrostatic spray coating (ESC) to deposit a base layer or preform on a substrate, followed by chemical vapor infiltration (CVI) to introduce a binder phase that creates a composite coating with good adherence of the binder to the initial phase particles and adherence of the composite coating to the substrate.
The present invention comprises additional methods for creating coatings composed of a single material or a composite of multiple materials, beginning with ESC to deposit the base layer and then using other methods for the binding step beyond CVI. ESC followed by CVI has been used successfully for creating composite coatings comprised of cubic boron nitride (cBN) and titanium nitride (TiN), on carbide substrates. However, because CVI exposes the substrate to high temperatures it is not suitable for certain materials that may be damaged or their properties degraded by the high temperature. Also, CVI as a binding step is not practical for applications involving very large surface areas due to the limited size of CVI reactors. Due to these and other limitations, we have devised additional means of applying a second phase to initial green coatings deposited using ESC. The new two-step coatings processes that result are disclosed in this application.
Also, for certain materials and applications, some pre-processing or pre-treatment of the coating materials is necessary prior to deposition in order to achieve a satisfactory coating. The invention in various embodiments comprises methods for pre-deposition treatment of materials prior to ESC deposition. It also comprises in various embodiments methods for post-processing that provide additional functionality or performance characteristics of the coating.
Finally, the invention in various embodiments comprises certain apparatus and equipment for accomplishing the methods described herein.
Disclosed herein are methods and apparatus for producing a coating on a substrate, beginning with electrostatic spray to deposit a base- or green-coating layer.
The substrate 170 is placed in a deposition system 200. One or more coating materials 150 are introduced into the deposition system 200. These coating materials may be in dry powder or liquid suspension form, and may contain nano- or micro-sized particles or a combination of the two. Multiple materials may be combined together or introduced separately into the deposition system 200. A variety of materials can be used, including nitrides, carbides, carbonitrides, borides, oxides, sulphides and silicides.
The deposition system 200 may use any of several methods to produce an initial coating or base layer on the substrate. One such deposition method is electrostatic spray coating (ESC), as described in U.S. Pat. No. 6,544,599 issued Apr. 8, 2003 to William D. Brown, et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 6,607,782 issued Aug. 19, 2003 to Ajay P. Malshe, et al. ESC deposition may be done as dry powder spray, or as liquid spray using a dispersion of the coating material in a suitable carrier liquid.
After the initial deposition step, dry solid particles of the coating material(s) are in contact with the substrate. The substrate with deposition 270 is the output of the deposition step 200 as illustrated in
The substrate 270 with deposition of a base layer then undergoes a post-deposition treatment step 300. Post-deposition treatment is used to bind the deposited dry particles to one another and to the substrate. Suitable treatment methods include:
Each of these methods applies one or more short bursts of high energy (microwave, laser, infrared, or high temperature and high pressure) to sinter the particles of the initial coating deposition, binding them to each other and to the substrate.
Another binding method is use of high temperature—high pressure (HT-HP), a process that is currently used for a variety of purposes including fabrication of polycrystalline cubic boron nitride (PCBN) solid compacts. In one embodiment of this invention, HT-HP is used as a post-deposition binding step to bind the deposited particles to each other and to the substrate.
In some embodiments, an additional treatment step (not shown in the figures) is applied after the post-deposition treatment step 300, to add an additional phase to the coating. One example of this is the use of electrostatic spray coating or ultrasonic spray deposition as a final step, after deposition and sintering of a base coating, for the purpose of applying active biological agents to the base coating. As a more specific example, a dental implant or other biomedical device, possibly with a porous surface layer, can be coated using ESC followed by microwave sintering of the base coating. Then in an additional post-sintering deposition step, an active agent can be applied, such as a biocidal or anti-bacterial agent, other active agents such as bone-morphogenic proteins, or particles carrying drugs for drug delivery at the surface of the device after implantation. These are just examples of how a post-processing step can be used to apply additional components to a base coating for specific purposes.
Other additional treatment steps (not shown in the figures) that can be applied after post-deposition treatment 300 can be used to enhance the binding of the coating and to reduce or eliminate defects and non-uniformities in the coating. For example, suitable treatments for hard coatings such as those used for cutting tools include high temperature—high pressure (HT-HP) and infrared sintering (pulsed infrared radiation). Other methods using transient energy sources also may be used to enhance the characteristics of the final coating on the substrate.
As shown in
As a pre-processing step prior to deposition, the pre-treatment methods disclosed herein may be used for any one or more of the following purposes:
Various methods and apparatuses for pre-deposition treatment of materials are described here. These may be used alone, or with the various deposition methods/systems described herein.
In one embodiment, dry powders consisting of nanoparticles, microparticles, or combinations thereof are fluidized using aerodynamic forces.
The air flow rate is adjusted such that aerodynamic forces place the powder particles in motion, with smaller particles rising to the top of the fluidized bed (11). The result is a vertical gradient of average particle size over the height of the air flow column (8), with larger particles residing toward the bottom of the column and smaller particles residing toward the top. Multiple powder exit ports (9) are provided, allowing for adjustment of the size of particles to be drawn from the fluidizer. A powder pickup tube (10) is placed in one of the exit ports (9) to remove particles from the fluidizer. The unused ports are capped. The provision of multiple exit ports provides the capability for preferentially feeding ultrafine powder particles by adjusting the position of the powder pick-up tube (moving it from one exit port to another). In this method, the fraction of particles that are ultrafine must be balanced against deposition time due to the smaller mass flow rate of ultrafine particles.
In some embodiments, vibration also can be applied in combination with aerodynamic forces by incorporating vibrators (not shown) into the fluidizer. Vibration from the vibrators helps incite the additional movement of powder particles. The vibrators use mechanical vibrating energy created by a motor with an off-center mass rotating at high speed, or acoustical energy from sound waves.
Larger clusters of the powder accumulate at the bottom of the fluidized bed (11) and may be removed manually as part of a batch operation. For larger-scale operations, this may be automated by providing a powder removal and recycling capability.
Another method of discriminating the size of particles and preferentially feeding nano-sized or ultrafine particles is by screening the powder using a micron sieve. A sieve (perforated plate or screen) can be used to screen out larger particles, collecting and feeding only the smaller particles based on the size of the openings in the sieve. This can be used as an option for any of the pre-deposition treatment methods described herein.
Still other methods for separating and feeding particles of a certain size range include use of gravity, buoyancy, and/or centrifugal forces to separate particles of different sizes. One example is to entrain the particles in a fluid stream (using air, nitrogen or other gas), and turn the direction of this stream such that larger particles are thrown to the outside where they are removed and recycled, while smaller particles are carried downstream to the deposition system 200. A second example is to create a low-velocity upward flow of particles entrained in a gas such that buoyancy tends to cause smaller particles to rise while larger particles tend to fall due to gravity forces exceeding buoyancy forces. Smaller particles are removed from the top or side and fed to the deposition system 200.
Methods for de-agglomerating particles are described below. These may be applied independent of any deposition system. Some of these methods of de-agglomeration will be described later in conjunction with integrated pre-treatment and deposition methods, and apparatus for performing pre-treatment and deposition.
One method for de-agglomeration is use of a jet mill to break up clusters through impingement from a high-pressure gas jet. The gas may be air, nitrogen, or any of a variety of other suitable gases.
A second method for de-agglomeration is to disperse the particles in a liquid where the liquid has certain properties that promote dispersion and de-agglomeration. For example, we have used a solvent such as ethanol, combined with a surfactant that is “neutral” or bipolar. The liquid dispersion can be coupled with sonication to help achieve and maintain the desired dispersion of particles in the liquid. The liquid dispersion can be fed directly to the deposition system (e.g., for liquid ESC) or dried prior to feeding the material to the deposition system (e.g., for dry ESC).
A third method of de-agglomeration is to disperse the particles in a liquid as noted above, and then further de-agglomerating and drying the particles using an ultrasonic spray drying technique prior to feeding the dry powder to the deposition system. Ultrasonic spray drying involves use of an ultrasonic spray nozzle, which atomizes the liquid dispersion and in the process breaks up agglomerations through the action of the ultrasonic vibration. The droplets exit the ultrasonic nozzle and are then dried (e.g., via a cyclone dryer), evaporating the carrier liquid and leaving the fine particles behind in dry form. These are then carried in a gas stream to the deposition system. In addition to de-agglomerating the particles, ultrasonic spray also helps produce particles of uniform size by creating droplets of uniform size.
A fourth method of de-agglomeration is to create an aerosol that is fed to the deposition system 200.
Combinations of the above-described methods also may be used. For example, one combined method of de-agglomeration is to first disperse the particles in a liquid to break up tightly-bound agglomerates (see discussion above for desirable liquid properties), then remove the liquid to dry the particles (at which point they may tend to re-agglomerate but in loosely-bound clusters), and then use a jet mill as a final step to break up any loosely-bound agglomerates that formed during or after drying. We have used this method successfully for pre-deposition treatment of cubic boron nitride powder prior to electrostatic spray deposition (see discussion of integrated pre-treatment and deposition below). The method we have used involves specifically the following steps:
For those methods that use liquid dispersion, the liquid dispersion can be coupled with sonication to help achieve and maintain the desired dispersion of particles in the liquid.
Functionalization of particles prior to deposition can allow coatings to be created for specific functions, or otherwise improve the characteristics of the resulting coating. Functionalization is typically realized by introducing a second phase or mixed phases of materials. For example, cubic boron nitride (cBN) particles can be over-coated with titanium nitride (TiN), titanium aluminum nitride (TiAlN), or aluminum oxide (Al2O3) to improve the flowability of cBN particles and to increase the resistance of the coating to oxidization (for the case of TiAlN overcoating). Functionalization also can introduce a guest material (such as silica in ultrafine particle size) that is stable and provides effective spacing between host material particles, reducing the chances of agglomeration. This will further help to improve powder coating surface quality such as surface roughness.
One method of functionalizing particles, including nanoparticles, microparticles, and combinations thereof, is to over-coat the particles with other materials chosen for specific functionality. A second method of functionalizing particles is to disperse them in a liquid containing a surfactant, where the carrier liquid and surfactant are chosen to provide a stable dispersion. The liquid dispersion can be fed to the deposition system 200 as a liquid dispersion (e.g., for liquid ESC) or dried prior to feeding the material to the deposition system (e.g., dry ESC). Liquid dispersion can be coupled with sonication to help achieve and maintain the desired dispersion of particles in the liquid.
Other pre-deposition treatment methods also can be used for pre-processing the coating materials prior to deposition, either alone or in combination with the methods described above. For example, the powder can be pre-heated to help drive moisture from the powder material. Ball milling also may be used to break up agglomerates and adjust the size of the powder particles provided to the deposition system.
The chamber is sealed so as to prevent egress of the coating material or ingress of contaminants. Material that is not deposited on the substrate(s) is collected in a powder recycling collector (5) so that material may be recycled. In the preferred embodiment, the unused material exits the sealed chamber via a liquid bath or other filtering means so that the material is captured for re-use and is prevented from being released to the environment.
In a preferred embodiment, the adjustments provided on the stage suspension assembly (3) are located external to the chamber by extending the assembly through the top of the chamber through openings that are sealed using O-ring type seals or other sealing means. With this design, adjustments in stage-to-nozzle distance can be made without opening the chamber.
As the sun plate rotates, the planetary gears move around the central axis of the assembly and, due to their interaction with the internal ring gear, the planetary gears also rotate on their own axes. Substrates are mounted on the individual planetary gear stages. The dual rotation action enhances the uniformity of the deposition on the substrate by ensuring that all points on the surface of the substrate are exposed equally to the material spray.
The planetary and ring gears can mesh using conventional gear teeth, or the planetary gears can be made as rollers that are pressed outward (e.g., by springs) such that the outer edge of each roller contacts the surface of the internal ring gear and friction causes the planetary gears to rotate.
For any type of electrostatic deposition, the planetary gears must be grounded in order to ground the substrate that is mounted on them. This requires that a means be provided to electrically connect the planetary gears to a grounded member. In one embodiment in which the planetary gears are rollers, the springs that press against the planetary gear shafts and hold the planetary gears against the internal ring gear also act as brushes to make an electrical connection between the planetary gears and the rest of the grounded rotating stage assembly.
The speed of the electric motor can be adjusted to ensure that the substrate to be coated is exposed to all parts of the deposition spray pattern equally in order to achieve the desired uniformity of coating. The speed can be adjusted by changing the power input (voltage) to the DC motor. In the specific embodiment shown in the figure, the ratio of the rotational speed of the planetary gears to that of the overall sun plate is fixed by the gear ratio. However, in alternative embodiments one or more additional motors or other means can be provided such that the two speeds can be adjusted independently.
The rotating stage also can be translated by mounting it on an appropriate platform that is moved laterally in either the x or the y direction, and the stage also can be translated in the z-axis direction (vertical direction in the figure), moving the rotating stage closer to or further away from the spray source.
Other optional features that can be included in the system described here are:
Commercially-available ESC guns can be used for the electrostatic spray coating systems described herein. However, the off-the-shelf guns commonly used for painting and powder coating have some disadvantages when applied for deposition of micro- and nano-sized particles. Specifically, the guns do not provide uniform flow within the passages internal to the gun, resulting in some spatial non-uniformity of the flow exiting the gun. Also, there are areas within the gun where powder tends to accumulate, which affects the ability to control the thickness of the deposition by controlling the mass of powder sent to the gun.
Also, two separate air inlets are provided. One is the booster air inlet (5), which provides the main feeding air for creating the electrostatic spray. In addition, air is provided to one or more vortex air inlets (3). In the example shown in the figure, two vortex air inlets are provided. These inlets are oriented such that air enters tangentially, creating a vortex within the ESC gun that helps to prevent powder accumulation on the surfaces of the nozzle body (6) and also helps maintain uniformity of the gas and powder mixture flow. The nozzle body is designed to have smooth surfaces with no crevices or cavities in which powder can accumulate.
This application claims priority from U.S. provisional patent application Ser. No. 60/852,931, entitled “Methods and Apparatus for Making Coatings Using Electrostatic Spray,” and filed on Oct. 19, 2006.
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/US07/22220 | 10/18/2007 | WO | 00 | 10/26/2010 |
Number | Date | Country | |
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60852931 | Oct 2006 | US |