This invention relates to thermal barrier coatings, and more particularly to bond coats for thermal barrier coatings on turbine components.
Gas turbine engine components (e.g., blades, vanes, seals, combustor panels, and the like) are commonly formed of nickel- or cobalt based superalloys. Desired operating temperatures often exceed that possible for the alloys alone. Thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) are in common use on such components to permit use at elevated temperatures. Various coating compositions (e.g., ceramics) and various coating methods (e.g., electron beam physical vapor deposition (EB-PVD) and plasma spray deposition) are known.
An exemplary modern coating system is applied to the superalloy substrate by an EB-PVD technique. An exemplary coating system includes a metallic bondcoat layer (e.g., an overlay of NiCoCrAlY alloy or diffusion aluminide) atop the substrate. A thermally insulating ceramic topcoat layer (e.g., zirconia stabilized with yttria (YSZ)) is deposited atop the bondcoat. During this deposition, a thermally grown oxide layer (TGO) (e.g., alumina) may form on the bondcoat and intervenes between the remaining underlying portion of the bondcoat and the topcoat.
In one exemplary coating system and associated process, a nickel-based superalloy substrate is initially plated with platinum. A heating step produces diffusion between the substrate and plating. After this platinum diffusion, a coating of aluminum is applied. During the aluminum application diffusion may form a platinum-containing aluminide. After this coating, a further heating step causes further diffusion resulting in greater uniformity by diffusing in excess surface aluminum and diffusing out nickel from the substrate. Thereafter, the YSZ coating is deposited by EB-PVD.
One aspect of the invention involves a coated article including a substrate and a thermal barrier layer. An aluminide layer is between the substrate and the thermal barrier layer. A PtAl2 layer is between the aluminide layer and the thermal barrier layer.
A method comprises applying an aluminum-containing first layer to a substrate, applying a platinum-containing second layer atop the first layer, causing diffusion of aluminum from the first layer into the second layer so as to produce a PtAl2 alloy, and applying a thermal barrier layer atop the PtAl2 alloy.
The details of one or more embodiments of the invention are set forth in the accompanying drawings and the description below. Other features, objects, and advantages of the invention will be apparent from the description and drawings, and from the claims.
Like reference numbers and designations in the various drawings indicate like elements.
The surface of the substrate to be coated may be prepared by chemical and/or mechanical means (e.g., cosmetic blasting as is known in the art). Thereafter, an aluminum-containing material is applied directly to the substrate surface. The application of the aluminum-containing material will serve to at least initially form an aluminide. Many application techniques are used in the art and are possible. An exemplary technique involves a conventional gas phase coating. Such a process involves placing the substrate in proximity to a coating media source generating coating vapors. This may be distinguished from chemical vapor deposition (CVD) techniques wherein the source is more remote. In CVD coating, the substrate is kept in a container which is separate from the coating media container(s). The CVD coating material vapors are delivered via separate carrier gas. In gas phase coating the substrate and the coating media are in the same container and the substrate does not touch the coating media (from which the coating vapors are generated).
An exemplary source material comprises aluminum chrome with ammonium fluoride, ammonium chloride, or aluminum flouride as an activator. Exemplary aluminum chrome is a granular alloy of aluminum and chromium in a eutectic 55:45 weight percent ratio. Upon heating of the aluminum chrome and activator (e.g., in a pan under controlled atmosphere conditions such as an inert gas(e.g., argon)), the activator causes release of an aluminum vapor which condenses on the substrate. An exemplary deposition duration is less than eight hours (e.g., five to seven hours) During this deposition, diffusion from the substrate (e.g., especially of nickel) converts the applied aluminum-containing material into nickel aluminide. This aluminide will tend to have an NiAl/NiAl2 composition further including other of the substrate alloying elements as alloying elements in the aluminide and/or as precipitates in the aluminide.
After the application of the aluminum-containing material and initial aluminide formation, a platinum-containing material is applied. The exemplary application involves electroplating of pure platinum. This application leaves a layer of the platinum-containing material atop the aluminide.
A diffusion step then produces diffusion of aluminum into the platinum layer and of platinum into the aluminide. An exemplary diffusion is caused by heating. Exemplary heating is to a temperature of at least 1850° F. (more preferably at least 1950° F.) for a time of at least five minutes (e.g., to about 1925° F. for about ten minutes in vacuum (e.g., 0.1 militorr or less) then 1975√ F. for about four hours in argon).
After any additional surface preparation (e.g., polishing) the YSZ coating may be applied. An exemplary YSZ application is by EB-PVD.
An exemplary thickness of the YSZ layer 22 is at least 40 μm (e.g., 50-100 μm). An exemplary thickness of the PtAl2 layer 24 is 5-20 cm. An exemplary thickness of the aluminide layer 26 is 25-100 μm.
Plating after the aluminum deposition may have one or more of several advantages. The plating may tend to provide a smooth surface by filling roughness imperfections in the aluminide. Exemplary roughness is 20-40 RA after diffusion. The smoothness promotes topcoat adhesion and associated spall resistance.
One or more embodiments of the present invention have been described. Nevertheless, it will be understood that various modifications may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention. For example, the principles may be applied as modifications of various existing or yet-developed coating systems and techniques and equipment. Details of any such baseline coating or technique or equipment may influence details of any particular implementation. Accordingly, other embodiments are within the scope of the following claims.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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200503371-7 | May 2005 | SG | national |