The present invention generally relates to coating processes and apparatuses. More particularly, this invention relates to a physical vapor deposition (PVD) apparatus and process for depositing a coating whose composition contains one or more reactive metals, such as a nickel aluminide alloyed with zirconium, hafnium, yttrium, and/or lanthanum.
In addition to high temperatures that can decrease their mechanical properties, components within the turbine, combustor, and augmentor sections of gas turbine engines are susceptible to oxidation and hot corrosion attack. Consequently, these components are often protected by an environmental coating alone or in combination with a ceramic thermal barrier coating (TBC), which in the latter case the environmental coating is termed a bond coat for the TBC. Components protected by an environmental coating or TBC system exhibit greater durability as well as afford the opportunity to improve engine efficiency by increasing the operating temperature of a gas turbine engine.
Environmental coatings and TBC bond coats are often formed of an oxidation-resistant aluminum-containing alloy or intermetallic whose aluminum content provides for the slow growth of a stable, adherent, and slow-growing aluminum oxide (alumina) layer (or scale) at elevated temperatures. Notable examples include diffusion coatings that contain aluminum intermetallics, predominantly beta-phase nickel aluminide and platinum-modified nickel aluminides (PtAl), and overlay coatings such as MCrAlX alloys (where M is iron, cobalt and/or nickel, and X is an active element such as yttrium or another rare earth or reactive element) or aluminide intermetallics (e.g., beta-phase and gamma-phase nickel aluminides). As examples of the latter, commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. Nos. 5,975,852, 6,291,084, 6,153,313, and 6,255,001 disclose beta-NiAl materials that are either optionally or preferentially alloyed to contain chromium and one or more active elements, such as yttrium, zirconium, hafnium, and/or lanthanum. The alumina scale grown by these coatings protects the coatings and their underlying substrates from oxidation and hot corrosion and promotes chemical bonding of a TBC (if present).
Suitable processes for depositing aluminide intermetallic and MCrAlX overlay coatings include thermal spraying such as plasma spraying and high velocity oxyfuel (HVOF) processes, and physical vapor deposition (PVD) processes such as electron beam physical vapor deposition (EBPVD), magnetron sputtering, cathodic arc, ion plasma, and pulsed laser deposition (PLD). PVD processes require the presence of a coating source material made essentially of the coating composition desired, and means for creating a vapor of the coating source material in the presence of a substrate that will accept the coating.
The addition of limited amounts of reactive metals to overlay aluminide and MCrAlX materials has been shown to significantly improve properties such as high temperature strength and TBC adhesion, thereby increasing the overall service lives of these protective coating systems and the components they protect. For example, as reported in commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 6,869,508, beta-NiAl overlay coatings benefit from very limited additions of zirconium, hafnium, yttrium, and/or cerium. However, difficulties have been encountered when attempting to co-deposit these reactive elements with the other elements of aluminide and MCrAlX overlay coatings, particularly when attempting to deposit these coatings by EBPVD. Such difficulties have been attributed to the significantly different vapor pressures that these metals have compared to the other coating elements, leading to limited deposition rates and difficulties in achieving controlled chemistries for the coatings. One approach to addressing this difficulty is to add a relatively large amount of the desired reactive element or elements to the main evaporation pool 14 by appropriately forming the ingot 10 to contain the principal elements of the coating (e.g., nickel, aluminum, chromium, etc.) and an amount of the reactive element(s) that exceeds the amount intended for the coating. However, if the vapor pressure of the reactive element is sufficiently low compared to the principal elements (as is the case with zirconium), at best the rate of evaporation is very low to the extent that an economical deposition process is difficult to achieve. A second approach is to evaporate the reactive element from a separate pool formed by simultaneously melting a second ingot formed of the reactive element. This approach is complicated by the instability of molten pools of reactive elements when attempting to deposit at the low rates desired for aluminide and MCrAlX overlay coatings.
In view of the above, it would be desirable if an improved evaporation process existed that was suitable for forming overlay environmental coatings and bond coats and was capable of co-depositing small, controlled amounts of reactive elements.
The present invention is a PVD process and apparatus for depositing a coating from multiple sources of different materials. The process and apparatus are particularly well suited for depositing aluminide and MCrAlX overlay coatings alloyed to contain one or more reactive metals whose vapor pressures are significantly lower than other elements of the coating.
The process of this invention entails forming at least first and second molten pools of different first and second materials, respectively, in a coating chamber of a PVD apparatus, supporting an article within the coating chamber, and evaporating the first and second molten pools with an energy beam to deposit a coating on the article with a controlled composition that contains at least a first metal and a relatively lesser amount of at least one reactive metal having a lower vapor pressure than the first metal. The first material contains at least the first metal, and the second material contains at least a second metal and the reactive metal. The process further entails combining the second metal with the reactive metal to cause the second material to have a melting temperature less than the melting temperature of the reactive metal and to have a wider melting range than the reactive metal.
The PVD apparatus of this invention includes a coating chamber that contains at least first and second molten pools of different first and second materials, respectively, an article supported within the coating chamber, and means for evaporating the first and second molten pools to deposit a coating on the article. The first material contains at least a first metal, and the second material contains at least a second metal and at least one reactive metal having a lower vapor pressure than the first metal of the first material. The second metal is combined with the reactive metal to cause the second material to have a melting temperature less than the melting temperature of the reactive metal and to have a wider melting range than the reactive metal. The evaporating means is operable to evaporate the first and second molten pools so that the coating deposited on the article has a controlled composition that contains the first metal and a relatively lesser amount of the reactive metal.
According to the invention, combining the low vapor pressure reactive metal with the second metal as set forth above improves the stability of the molten pool containing the reactive element, enabling the reactive metal to be deposited in small, more controllable amounts than if attempting to melt and evaporate a molten pool containing only the reactive element. The improved stability and evaporation rate are believed to arise in part as a result of the second metal reducing the melting temperature of the second metal compared to the reactive metal, such as through a eutectic, isomorphous, etc., reaction with the reactive metal, and also in part as a result of the second metal increasing the temperature range over which the reactive metal is available in molten form for evaporation and deposition. The second metal can be chosen to have a sufficiently lower vapor pressure than the reactive element to minimize and potentially avoid the deposition of the second metal on the article being coated. Alternatively, the second metal can be chosen to have a vapor pressure that results in the second metal being co-deposited with the first and reactive metals to improve the properties of the resulting coating.
Other objects and advantages of this invention will be better appreciated from the following detailed description.
The present invention is generally applicable to depositing protective coatings on components that operate within environments characterized by high temperatures, such as the turbine, combustor, and augmentor sections of gas turbine engines, and are therefore subjected to oxidation and hot corrosion. However, as will become evident from the following discussion, the invention is applicable to a variety of other coating types and compositions.
A coating apparatus 120 is represented in
As with the apparatus 20 of
From the above, it can be appreciated that the overlay coating 132 will contain elements from both of the ingots 110 and 111. For example, if the desired overlay coating 132 is a beta-NiAl intermetallic material, the ingots 110 and 111 provide in combination nickel, aluminum, and any additional desired alloying constituents, such as chromium, one or more reactive elements, etc., to yield a coating useful as an environmental coating or bond coat for gas turbine engine applications. As taught in commonly-assigned U.S. Pat. No. 5,975,852 to Nagaraj et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,153,313 to Rigney et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,255,001 to Darolia, U.S. Pat. No. 6,291,084 to Darolia et al., U.S. Pat. No. 6,620,524 to Pfaendtner et al., and U.S. Pat. No. 6,682,827 to Darolia et al., particularly suitable NiAl-based coatings contain about 20 to 32 weight percent (about 35-50 atomic percent) aluminum to achieve the beta intermetallic phase, and may contain one or more of chromium, titanium, tantalum, silicon, gallium, calcium, and iron, and one or more reactive metals such as zirconium, hafnium, cerium, yttrium, and/or lanthanum. The presence of limited amounts of reactive metals in beta-NiAl overlay coatings, typically not exceeding about two weight percent of such coatings and preferably about one weight percent, has been shown to improve environmental resistance and strength, the latter primarily by solid solution strengthening of the beta-phase NiAl matrix.
Zirconium, hafnium, yttrium, and lanthanum have sufficiently lower vapor pressures than beta-NiAl to lead to limited deposition rates and difficulties in achieving controlled coating chemistries. During evaporation of these reactive metals from a separate pool (e.g., 115), the vapor pressure above the melting point of the reactive metal is still very low compared to NiAl. Furthermore, evaporating a superheated molten pool 115 containing a single (pure) reactive element can lead to pool instability. Because pool stability is important to maintain constant evaporation for control of coating composition, if the pool 115 were to be formed of a single reactive metal, care must be taken to maintain the pool 115 above the high melting temperature of the reactive metal.
With the embodiment of
As an example of the above, zirconium can be alloyed with tungsten to form a eutectic (about 91.0 atomic percent zirconium) whose melting temperature (about 1735° C.) is significantly lower than the melting temperature of zirconium (about 1855° C.). Furthermore, tungsten can be alloyed with zirconium over a range of above 88 to less than 100 atomic percent zirconium to form alloys with lower melting temperatures than zirconium (covering a melting range of about 120° C.). As such, a Zr—W alloy having a tungsten content approaching 12 atomic percent benefits the evaporation of zirconium by reducing the temperature required to maintain the molten pool 115 and increasing the temperature range over which the pool 115 is molten and stable. Because tungsten has a vapor pressure lower than zirconium, the deposition process can be carried out so that little if any tungsten is co-deposited with zirconium on the component 130. For example, the EB gun 128 can be operated to control the temperature of the molten pool 115, with lower temperatures promoting the deposition of the higher vapor pressure metal (e.g., zirconium) with little if any co-deposition of the lower vapor pressure metal (e.g., tungsten), whereas higher pool temperatures promote co-deposition of the lower and higher vapor pressure metals. Other metals with lower vapor pressures than zirconium and capable of providing a similar benefit include tantalum and rhenium. As such, any one or more of tungsten, tantalum, and rhenium can be alloyed with zirconium to reduce the melting temperature of the ingot 111 and increase the temperature range over which the pool 115 is molten and stable, with or without being co-deposited with zirconium. In addition, tantalum and/or rhenium combined with zirconium have the additional advantage of improving the properties (strength, adhesion, etc.) of the coating 132.
A similar benefit can be achieved with, for example, hafnium as the desired reactive metal. For example, hafnium can be alloyed with zirconium and/or tantalum (whose vapor pressures are lower than hafnium) to yield a material with a melting temperature lower than hafnium and having a relatively wide temperature range over which the pool 115 is molten and stable, with or without being co-deposited with hafnium. Notably, the co-deposition of hafnium with either or both zirconium and tantalum has the advantage of improving the properties (strength, adhesion, etc.) of the coating 132.
Alternatively, the reactive element can be alloyed with a metal having a higher vapor pressure. As an example, any additions of yttrium to zirconium will yield a Zr—Y alloy having a lower melting temperature than zirconium, with a minimum melting temperature of about 1353° C. corresponding to an yttrium content of about 40 atomic percent. As such, a Zr—Y alloy benefits the evaporation of zirconium by reducing the temperature required to maintain the molten pool 115 and by increasing the temperature range over which the pool 115 is molten and stable. Because yttrium has a higher vapor pressure than zirconium, the deposition process inherently co-deposits yttrium and zirconium on the component 130, with the relative amounts of yttrium and zirconium being controllable over a wide range by the relative amounts of yttrium and zirconium in the ingot 111.
In view of the above, the present invention enables the use of lower temperatures to maintain the molten pool 115 containing one or more reactive elements, resulting in more stable evaporation. In this way, small amounts of the desired reactive metal in the pool 115 can be deposited in the overlay coating 132 in a more controllable way. By using one or more additional (alloying) metals with lower vapor pressures compared to the vapor pressure of the desired reactive metal, co-deposition of one or more of the alloying metals can be minimized (e.g., at levels of about five weight percent or less, more preferably less than 0.05 weight percent) or even avoided. Alternatively, properties of the coating 132 can be modified and potentially improved by intentionally co-depositing one or more alloying metals with the reactive metal. In this case, the combination of metals is still intended to produce a molten pool 115 that exists over a range of temperatures, but the alloying metal or metals can either have higher, the same, or lower vapor pressures than the desired reactive metal(s), depending on the chemistry desired for the coating 132.
Also within the scope of this invention is to form a low melting alloy in situ by feeding the reactive metal or metals separately into the molten pool 115, as represented in
In an investigation leading to this invention, a multi-pool EBPVD evaporation process was conducted for the purpose of depositing a beta-NiAl overlay coating containing zirconium as a reactive metal additive. In a first trial series, nickel and aluminum were evaporated from a first molten pool, and unalloyed zirconium was evaporated from a separate molten pool. The molten zirconium pool proved to be unstable and the resulting coatings contained significantly varying zirconium percentages. In a second trial series, zirconium was alloyed with about 10 atomic percent tungsten, and the EB-PVD evaporation process was repeated. The Zr—W pool was molten at a lower temperature and more stable than the zirconium pool of the previous trial, and the zirconium content of the deposited coatings was much more consistent. As seen from the test results of these trials summarized in Table I below, the standard deviation for the zirconium content of the coatings from the second trial was reduced by a factor of about four compared to the coatings of the first trial.
Though the above results were obtained with beta-NiAl coatings deposited by EBPVD, it is believed that similar results can also be achieved by depositing other coating compositions and using other PVD processes. Therefore, while the invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments, it is apparent that modifications could be adopted by one skilled in the art. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is to be limited only by the following claims.