Claims
- 1. A supersonic plasma spray nozzle for use in the plasma spray deposition of a coating onto a target substrate, said spray nozzle comprising: a nozzle body formed of a resilient heat resistant material and having a first end and a second end;
- said body defining a central passageway having a longitudinal axis, said passageway extending through said nozzle body from said first end to said second end thereof;
- means in said passageway for heating a flow of gas through the passageway to temperatures sufficient to ionize the gas flow and transform the gas flow into a heated plasma flow;
- means in said passageway for injecting a material to be spray deposited, in powder form, into a plasma flow moving through said passageway;
- said passageway having an upstream section adjacent said first end of said nozzle body, a throat section intermediate said first and second ends of said nozzle body, and a downstream section adjacent said second end of said nozzle body;
- said upstream section of said passageway converging in cross sectional area from said first end of said nozzle body to said throat section and said downstream section of said passageway diverging in cross sectional area from said throat section to said second end of said nozzle body;
- said diverging downstream section having a bell-shaped contour defined by continuously curving concave walls, said walls diverging outwardly from said throat section of said passageway and being substantially parallel to said longitudinal axis of said passageway at said second end of said nozzle body, whereby a plasma flow issuing from said nozzle is ideally and isentropically expanded as it moves through said bell-shaped downstream section of said passageway to exhibit reduced shock phenomena and consequent reduced overspray.
- 2. A supersonic plasma spray nozzle as claimed in claim 1 and wherein the bell-shape contour of said downstream section of said passageway is determined through application of the Method of Characteristics to insure efficient isentropic expansion of a plasma flow moving therethrough.
- 3. A supersonic plasma spray nozzle as claimed in claim 2 and wherein the bell-shape contour of said downstream section of said passageway is determined through application of a two-dimensional Method of Characteristics.
- 4. In the design of a supersonic plasma spray nozzle having a plasma passageway with a convergent upstream section, a throat section, and a divergent downstream section, a method of defining a bell-shaped contour of the divergent downstream section of the passageway such that plasma flow moving from the throat section of the passageway through the downstream section to the nozzle exit expands isentropically to produce a collimated plasma spray and is ideally expanded at the nozzle exit to reduce shock phenomena within the plasma spray, all for the purpose of decreasing overspray, said method comprising the steps of:
- (a) determining the ambient pressure within which a plasma spray deposition procedure is to be accomplished;
- (b) determining the characteristics of the gas to be passed through the nozzle for producing a heated plasma;
- (c) calculating for the divergent downstream section of the passageway the ratio of nozzle exit area to throat area required to insure that the pressure within the plasma flow at the nozzle exit is substantially the same as the determined ambient pressure;
- (d) calculating for the divergent downstream section of the passageway a bell-shaped contour defined by continuously curving concave walls that diverge from the throat section and that are substantially parallel to the longitudinal axis of the passageway at the nozzle exist so that a plasma flow moving through the downstream section of the passageway expands isentropically from the throat to the nozzle exit to create a plasma spray that is collimated and remains tightly packed from the nozzle to a target substrate; and
- (e) fabricating a plasma spray nozzle having the physical characteristics determined in steps (c) and (d).
- 5. The method of claim 4 and where in step (c) the ratio of exit area to throat area is determined through application of the equations ##EQU8## and ##EQU9## where A.sub.e is the exit area, A.sub.t is the throat area, M.sub.e is the design Mach number, .gamma. is the ratio of specific heats for the plasma gas, P.sub.o is the stagnation pressure, and P.sub.e is the static pressure of the plasma flow at the nozzle exit.
- 6. The method of claim 5 and wherein step (d) includes implementing a Method of Characteristics to determine uniquely the bell-shaped contour of the divergent downstream section of the passageway.
- 7. The method of claim 6 and wherein the Method of Characteristics is two-dimensional.
- 8. The method of claim 6 and wherein the Method of Characteristics is three-dimensional.
- 9. The method of claim 4 and wherein step (d) includes implementing a Method of Characteristics to determine uniquely the bell-shaped contour of the divergent downstream section of the passageway.
- 10. A Laval nozzle for use in supersonic plasma spray devices, said nozzle having a throat, a nozzle exit, and a divergent section extending from said throat to said nozzle exit, said divergent section having a bell-shaped contour defined by continuously curving concave walls that diverge from said throat and that are substantially parallel to each other at said nozzle exit, whereby a plasma flow is expanded isentropically as it traverses said divergent section to create a plasma spray with significantly reduced shock phenomena and overspray.
STATEMENT OF GOVERNMENT SUPPORT
This invention was made with Government support under Contract NAS8-39802 awarded by NASA. The Government has certain rights in this invention.
US Referenced Citations (12)
Foreign Referenced Citations (3)
Number |
Date |
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0425623B1 |
Mar 1994 |
EPX |
4129120A1 |
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NLX |