This invention generally relates to methods for heating powder materials, including processes and materials for use in the manufacturing and repair of superalloy components. More particularly, this invention relates to a process employing a powder material whose particle size and distribution promote heating and sintering or melting of the powder material by microwave energy.
Nickel, cobalt, and iron-base superalloys are widely used to form high temperature components of gas turbine engines. While some high-temperature superalloy components can be formed as a single casting, others are preferably or required to be fabricated by other processes. As an example, powder metallurgy (PM) techniques are used to form certain components of gas turbine engines, notable examples of which include turbine rotor disks. An advantage to using powdered metals is that forming operations, such as compression molding, can be used to form intricate molded part configurations with reduced need for additional machining operations. As a result, the formed part is often near-net-shape immediately after the forming operation. Another example of an alternative fabrication process involves joining operations, as in the case of high pressure turbine nozzle assemblies. Such joining operations are typically involve brazing techniques, which conventionally encompass joining operations performed at an elevated temperature but below the melting point of the metals being joined. In carrying out the brazing process, an appropriate braze alloy is placed between the interface (faying) surfaces to be joined, and the faying surfaces and the braze alloy therebetween are heated in a vacuum to a temperature sufficient to melt the braze alloy without melting or causing grain growth in the superalloy base material. The braze alloy melts at a lower temperature than the superalloy base material as a result of containing a melting point suppressant such as boron. On cooling, the braze alloy solidifies to form a permanent metallurgical bond.
During engine operation, gas turbine engine components are subject to strenuous high temperature conditions under which various types of damage or deterioration can occur. As examples, erosion and oxidation reduce wall thicknesses of turbine nozzles and vanes, and cracks can initiate at surface irregularities and propagate as a result of stresses that are aggravated by thermal cycling. Because the cost of components formed from superalloys is relatively high, it is often more desirable to repair these components rather than replace them. In response, brazing techniques have been developed for crack repair and wall thickness build-up that entail placing a braze alloy filler metal on the surface area requiring repair, and then heating the filler metal in a vacuum to above its melting point, but below that of the surface substrate, so that the molten filler metal wets, flows, and fills the damaged area.
While widely employed to fabricate and repair gas turbine engine components, conventional brazing processes have notable disadvantages. First, the entire component must be subjected to a vacuum heat treatment, which is a very lengthy process in a production environment, unnecessarily exposes undamaged regions of the component to high temperatures, and can potentially remelt joints in other sections of the component. Furthermore, the braze alloy typically comprises elements similar to the base metal of the component, but with the addition of melting point suppressants (e.g., boron, silicon, etc.) that reduce its melting point below the base metal solidus temperature, thereby significantly altering its mechanical properties. Microwave brazing has been investigated as a potential candidate for eliminating these issues, as heating can be localized to selected areas of a component. Two approaches have generally been proposed for microwave brazing. A first entails the use of a susceptor (e.g., SiC enclosure) that is heated when exposed to microwave energy and, in turn, transfers the heat to the component by radiation. Drawbacks to this approach are lack of local heating of the braze alloy only, as an entire region of the component is inevitably heated, and significant heat loss from radiation in directions away from the intended brazement. A second approach entails direct microwave heating of metallic powders, which are significantly more susceptible to absorbing microwave energy than bulk metals whose tendency is to reflect microwaves. However, typical braze alloy compositions do not couple sufficiently with microwave energy to be melted, with the result that the braze alloy powder is instead sintered and as a result has properties greatly inferior to the base metal of the component.
The present invention generally provides a process for heating a powder material by microwave radiation so that heating of the powder material is selective and can be sufficient to cause complete melting of the particles as a result of the heating directionally progressing through the powder material.
The process of this invention generally entails forming a structure from a powder by arranging the powder in a mass according to particle size so that particles of the powder are progressively arranged within at least a region of the mass from smallest to largest in a direction of progression through the mass. The mass is then subjected to microwave radiation so that the particles within the mass progressively couple with the microwave radiation according to size, the smallest particles coupling first and heating faster than larger particles of the powder, and the largest particles coupling last and heating slower than smaller particles of the powder. Accordingly, as a result of the progressive arrangement of the particles, the mass is progressively and directionally heated by the microwave radiation. The microwave radiation is eventually interrupted to allow the mass to cool and form the structure.
According to the invention, the process described above can be carried out so that the mass is heated so as to partially or completely melt the particles, with the smallest particles melting first and the largest particles melting last, such that the mass is progressively and directionally melted by the microwave radiation and upon cooling forms a sintered structure (if only partial melting occurred) or a solidified structure (if complete melting occurred). As such, the process can be applied to various applications in which heating of a powdered material is desired, for example, the fabrication of sintered or fully consolidated powder metallurgy (PM) articles, the forming of coatings including the repair or build-up of a damaged surface, and the metallurgical joining of components such as by soldering or brazing. Because heating is by microwave radiation, the heating rate and melting of the powder particles is determined by particle size, instead of location relative to a heating source or relative to any surface contacted by the powder mass. This aspect of the invention enables a region of the powder mass formed of sufficiently small particles to melt prior to melting of a substrate contacted by the region. As a result, the powder particles can be formed of a material having the same melting temperature (for example, within 150° C.) as the substrate contacted by the powder mass. This aspect of the invention also enables the powder mass to contain powder particles with different melting temperatures to achieve certain processing capabilities. For example, microwave heating of a powder mass containing particles that are smaller and have a higher melting temperature than other particles within the mass can induce melting of the smaller high-temperature particles prior to melting of the larger low-temperature particles.
Other objects and advantages of this invention will be better appreciated from the following detailed description.
The invention will be described with specific reference to processing of components for a gas turbine engine, including the fabrication, coating, and repair of such components with a braze material. However, the invention has application to a variety of components and materials other than those discussed, and such variations are within the scope of this invention.
The powder particles 12 can be formed of a variety of materials, limited only by the requirement that the particles 12 are capable of being heated when subjected to microwave radiation and are compatible with the material of the substrate 14 while at the maximum heating temperature. Materials capable of being heated when subjected to microwave radiation include pure metals (such as Ni, Ti, Al, Co, Cr, etc.), metallic alloys (such as superalloys, steels, braze compositions, etc.), and alloying additives (such as B, C, Hf, Zr, Si, etc.), though additions, mixing, and layering with other materials (such as polymeric, amorphous or ceramic materials) are also within the scope of the invention. A wide range of microwave frequencies could be used with the present invention, though regulations generally encourage or limit implementation of the invention to typically available frequencies, e.g., 2.45 GHz and 915 MHz, with the former believed to be preferred.
In an embodiment of the invention in which the substrate 14 is a region of a component to be coated, repaired, or joined to another component, the particles 12 are preferably formed of a material that is metallurgically compatible with the substrate 14. Compatibility is assured if the particles 12 have the very same composition as that of the substrate 14, though suitable compatibility can also be achieved if the particles 12 and substrate 14 do not have compositions prone to detrimental interdiffusion at elevated temperatures that would lead to loss of desired mechanical or environmental properties. For example, if formed of a metallic material the particles 12 preferably do not contain a melting point suppressant (such as boron or silicon) at such levels that would lead to an unacceptable loss of properties in the substrate 14 if a significant amount of the suppressant were to diffuse into the substrate 14 during heating of the particles 12 and later during the life of the substrate 14. As will be discussed in more detail below, the particles 12 are not required to have the same composition, but instead particles 12 of different compositions may be combined to form the powder mass 10.
According to the invention, the progressive particle size distribution in the powder mass 10 facilitates a progressive coupling of microwave energy 26 with the powder mass 10, in which the smallest particles 22 couple first and most readily with the microwave energy 26 so as to be heated by the microwave energy 26 at a faster rate, and the largest particles 16 couple last and less readily with the microwave energy 26 so as to be heated by the microwave energy 26 at a relatively slower rate. During exposure of the layered or graded mass 10 to the microwave energy 26, this progressive particle size distribution produces a progression or directionality of heating that follows the progression of particle size, as indicated by the arrow in
In view of the above, it can be appreciated that progressive and directional heating in this manner can be used to cause directional melting to occur based on particle size distribution in the mass 10, instead of the conventional mechanism of absorbing convective and/or radiant heat at the exterior surface of the mass 10 and subsequent conduction through the mass 10 toward its interior. As such, the heating process performed by this invention can be achieved without any assistance from convective or radiant heating, such as susceptors used in the past. As known in the art, metallic powders are significantly more susceptible to microwave heating by absorbing microwave energy than bulk metals, which reflect microwave radiation. By localizing particles 12 of sufficiently small size (e.g., particles 22) to effectively couple with the applied microwave energy 26, partial or complete melting can be initiated in the particles 22, with heating from the continuing microwave energy 26 and resultant molten particles combining to cause the adjacent and slightly larger particles (e.g., 20) to partially or completely melt, with this process directionally progressing through the mass 10 toward the largest particles 16. In this manner, whereas microwave energy has been typically limited to sintering braze alloy powders, the process of the present invention is believed to be capable of fully melting braze alloy powders.
As previously noted, while all particles 12 may be formed to have the same composition, it is also possible to have a variation in the composition of the particles 16, 18, 20, and 22, for example, different compositions for different sizes of particles 16, 18, 20, and 22, and/or different compositions for particles 16, 18, 20, and 20 of the same size. Such an approach could be used, for example, to place particles 12 of a highly susceptible material at the surface of the substrate 14 (e.g., the particles 16 in
Because bulk metals such as the substrate 14 tend to reflect microwave radiation, the present invention makes possible the brazing of a superalloy substrate 14 with alloys having, in addition to melting temperatures below that of the superalloy, an alloy having the very same composition as the substrate 14, as well as alloys with the same or even higher melting point as the substrate 14. For example, a nickel-base superalloy component can be joined, coated, or repaired with a braze material of the same nickel-base superalloy composition or another nickel-base alloy, in other words, an alloy whose base metal is the same as the base metal of the substrate 14. In this manner, degradation of the properties of the substrate 14 resulting from interdiffusion with the braze material can be essentially if not entirely avoided. In view of the capability of melting particles 12 formed of an alloy having a melting point above that of the substrate 14, it should be appreciated that the term “brazing” as used herein is not limited to the conventional limitation of a joining operation performed at a temperature below the melting point of the metals being joined.
As noted above, the present invention can be implemented in the fabrication of articles by powder consolidation and in the coating, repair, or build-up of a surface of an article. For example, a freestanding sintered article can be produced by directionally heating the mass 10 of particles 12 to a sufficient temperature to cause directional sintering of the particles 12. Alternatively, higher temperatures can be induced to cause directionally heating the mass 10 to a sufficient temperature to cause directional melting of the particles 12, which on solidification can yield a dense freestanding PM article. In either of these scenarios, the substrate 14 would likely be a mold with which the particles 12 do not metallurgically bond, and the particles 12 would preferably undergo consolidation under pressure to promote densification of the article. Another example of implementing this invention is to use the mass 10 of
As represented in
Alternatively, an inside-out progression can be achieved. For example, the smallest particles 22 can be located within the interior of the mass 10 and the largest particles 16 at the exterior of the mass 10, so that particle size increases in all directions toward the outer surfaces of the mass 10 and directional melting progresses in all directions from the interior of the mass 10 toward the surfaces of the mass 10. Another option represented in
In view of the above, it should be appreciated that the invention can be readily used to achieve directional solidification of a molten mass on a wide variety of substrates, and such a result may be of particular interest to the application. Directional solidification will occur in many cases (e.g., the arrangements of
Notably, if powders of two or more different compositions with different melting points are appropriately arranged in the mass 10 and subjected to microwave energy 26, the progression of heating and melting through the mass 10 would not necessarily follow what would ordinarily be dictated by a uniform heating rate and inherent melting points based alone on the chemistry of the particles 12. For example, relatively smaller particles (e.g., particles 18, 20, and/or 22) formed of an alloy with a relative high melting point could be caused to melt sooner than relatively larger particles (e.g., particles 16, 18, and/or 20) with a lower melting point. Potential applications for using powders of two or more different compositions include coatings formed of metallic, ceramics, and/or composites. Adjusting the particle sizes for different constituents of a coating can be used in numerous applications, examples of which include: wear coatings with hard particles (e.g., CrC or WC) in a metal alloy (e.g., Co-based) matrix that is preferentially molten; inclusion of a polymeric material to reduce weight, adjust porosity, and/or alter abrasion characteristics of the coating; abradable ceramic coatings (e.g., turbine blade applications) in a lower melting point matrix material; and combinations of metallic and ceramic coatings, in which a first layer of fine metallic powder of an alloy with high oxidation resistance is deposited under a second layer of ceramic powder that, once consolidated, provides additional oxidation resistance or thermal protection.
As represented in
It will be understood that processes associated with sintering and brazing are preferably preformed in an inert or low pressure atmosphere to minimize oxidation of the metallic particles 12 and any surfaces (e.g., substrates 14 and 24) to which the particles 12 are bonded. Furthermore, it should be understood that suitable and preferred sizes for the particles 12 will depend on the particular application, temperatures, and materials involved. Generally speaking, it is believed that a maximum particle size will be on the order of about 100 mesh (about 150 micrometers), whereas minimum particle sizes can be as little as nanoscale-sized, e.g., less than 100 nanometers such as on the order of about 10 nanometers.
While the invention has been described in terms of particular embodiments, it is apparent that other forms could be adopted by one skilled in the art. Accordingly, the scope of the invention is to be limited only by the following claims.
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