The present invention concerns a thermally sprayed coating, which has been applied onto the surface of the substrate as a lamellar coating. Further, the invention concerns the use of such a coating in protecting against corrosion, as well as a process for producing such a coating.
Previously, it has been attempted to avoid delamination of coatings due to corrosion by forming a dense coating that is as tightly attached to the surface as possible. However, thermally sprayed coatings are always lamellar (sectional), whereby this tight attachment is not as easy to achieve as with some other types of coatings. Therefore, the use of coatings applied by thermal spraying has not been common in applications required to endure highly corrosive conditions. At lower temperatures, polymer-based sealing materials have been used, but for high-temperature applications there have still been no satisfying solutions.
In corroding environments, such as environments containing e.g. chlorides or sulfides, or both, such as in engines and in energy applications (e.g. energy boilers, car engines, fuel cells), the use of thermally sprayed coatings has still become more common, due to the other advantages of thermally sprayed coatings. The biggest problem related to these coatings has been the access of the corroding substances to the substrate along the lamellar boundaries (interfaces between the sections) of the coating. In addition to leading to corrosion, this can lead to the mentioned delamination of the coating.
Similar situations occur in other types of coatings, as the interfaces between the particles of the materials used in the coatings function as the laminate edges or boundaries of the thermally sprayed coatings.
Therefore, there is a need for achieving solutions that provide a stable and tightly attached coating with all edges and interfaces protected stably and successfully from corrosion.
It is an object of the invention to produce thermally sprayed coatings that provide an efficient protection against corrosion.
It is a particular object of the invention to produce coatings having an element or a compound applied to the lamellar boundaries, which element or compound reacts with corroding substances (such as chlorides and sulfides), thereby forming solid product compounds (e.g. MoS2 or NiCl2, and thereby blocking their pathways).
These and other objects, together with the advantages thereof over known coatings and methods, are achieved by the present invention, as hereinafter described and claimed.
Thus, the present invention concerns a thermally sprayed coating, which has been applied onto the surface of the substrate as a lamellar coating.
Further, the present invention concerns the use of such a coating in protecting against corrosion, as well as a process for producing such a coating.
Considerable advantages are obtained by means of the invention. For example, the invention provides a coating and means of obtaining said coating, which protect the surfaces of any substrate from corrosion, even along its edges, and even along the lamellar boundaries of the coating.
The present invention concerns a thermally sprayed coating, which has been applied onto the surface of the substrate as a lamellar coating. This coating is characterized by being formed from a completely or partially melted/plastisized solid starting material, preferably being completely plastisized, which material contains at least one component that is capable of reacting with corroding substances and combining with them to form one or more solid product compounds.
Suitable substrates to be coated can be any substrates susceptible to corrosion due to the presence of corrosive elements in their environments. Particularly, the substrates are metal components. Most suitable, the substrates are components used in or in the vicinity of engines, boilers or fuel cells.
The invention also concerns a process for producing such coatings, and for applying them onto substrates.
The thermally sprayed coating is formed as incited and/or plastisized drops of the coating material are solidified on the surface of the substrate to be coated, thus forming a lamellar structure on said surface.
In the process of the present invention, thermal spraying is used to apply a completely or partially plastisized or melted solid starting material, such as a powder, onto the surface of a substrate. The surface layer of the solid starting material is capable of reacting with corroding substances and combining with them to form solid product compounds.
The solid starting material, which is completely or partially plastisized or melted during spraying, is preferably a metal, a metal alloy, a metal oxide, a ceramic compound or a polymer, or a mixture of these, whereby the metal preferably is selected from the group of Ni, Mg, Cd, Mn, Mo, Pd, Pt, W, Ir and Ta, more preferably from the transition metals of said group, the metal most suitably being molybdenum. Particularly, the solid starting material is selected from materials that form metal oxides, chlorides or sulfides or two or more of these in ambient conditions, preferably from materials forming metal sulfides, most suitably molybdenum sulfide.
In the process of the invention, the solid starting material is preferably applied onto the surface of the substrate as a mist of droplets of said completely or partially plastisized or melted solid starting material.
According to an embodiment of the invention, the solid starting material is used to form a composite powder.
According to a preferred embodiment of the invention, the solid starting material is used to form a composite powder containing a main component, which is selected from the above solid starting materials, and one or more subcomponents, also selected from the above solid starting materials. These subcomponents are herein also called “trap materials”.
According to a particularly preferred embodiment, these composite powder particles are coated using one or more of these subcomponents.
According to one aspect of the present invention, the thermally sprayed composite powders, suitable for use in the present invention, are manufactured by agglomerating and sintering the different components of the composite into the same particle. The idea is to use this process to form a powder containing a mixture of the main component with the subcomponent(s), wherein the main component would be a material performing well in the corrosive conditions to be expected and the subcomponent(s) would be one or more materials having lower inciting points or lower melt viscosities.
When thermally spraying such a powder, the material having the lower melting point or the lower melt viscosity will be more easily and evenly distributed upon impact with the surface of the substrate to be coated, i.e. upon impact with the lamellar boundaries of the forming coating.
According to another aspect of the invention, the powder particles are formed from the main component and these particles are coated using the “trap material” (i.e. the subcomponents) to form a powder coating, whereby it will remain on the lamellar boundaries of the forming thermally sprayed coating (in the following, the term “coating”, used alone, will refer to the thermally sprayed coating, while the powder particles may optionally be covered with a “powder coating”). As the corroding substance reaches these lamellar boundaries, the trap material reacts, thus forming a solid product compound and blocking the pathway of the corroding substance.
According to both mentioned aspects, the main component is any powder, preferably selected from alloys containing two of the mentioned metals suitable for use as the solid starting material, most suitably Ni and Cr. The number of subcomponents is preferably limited to one, which more preferably is selected from the mentioned metals suitable for use as the solid starting material, the metal most suitably being Mo or Ni.
According to one alternative of the present invention, the thermally sprayed coating is optimized for environments expected to be rich in sulfur or sulfides. An example of such a situation is engine applications. Metals forming sulfides, and thus being suitable for use in the plastisizable solid starting materials of the coatings of this embodiment include Ni, Mg, Cd, Mn, Mo, Pd, Pt, W, Ir and Ta. Preferably, the metal(s) used in the main component and the subcomponent(s) of these coatings are selected from Ni, Ni alloys and Mo. Most suitably, at least one subcomponent is molybdenum.
For example, molybdenum can be applied onto the lamellar boundaries of the coating produced from the main component onto an engine to form a solid molybdenum sulfide compound when reacting with the sulfur released during the combustion. MoS2 is a tightly packed compound, but on an atomic level it is easily sliding, whereby it would guarantee its own access to every open and available position of the lamellar boundaries, thus blocking these positions. The compound is stabile and capable of formation at room temperature and even at temperatures of up to 1000° C. Thus, no corroding substance would gain access to the interfaces between the coating and the substrate to damage said substrate and possibly cause delamination of the coating.
According to another alternative of the present invention, the thermally sprayed coating is optimized for environments expected to be rich in chlorides or chlorine. An example of such a situation is energy boilers. Metals forming chlorides, and thus being suitable for use in the plastisizable solid starting materials of the coatings of this embodiment include Ni, Mg, Cd, Mn, Mo, Pd, Pt, W, Ir and Ta. Preferably, the metal(s) used in the main component and the subcomponent(s) of these coatings are selected from Ni and Ni alloys. Most suitably, at least one subcomponent is nickel.
In demanding corrosive conditions, the particle interfaces of the used materials, which correspond to the lamellar boundaries formed at thermal spraying, function as the main pathway for corrosive substances. In the case of coatings, these substances gain access to the interface between the coating and the substrate, thus causing corrosion of the substrate as well as delamination of the coating.
Thus, the idea of the present invention is to prepare thermally sprayed coatings, where elements or compounds have been applied to the lamellar boundaries of the coating to there react with corrosive substances (such as sulfides or chlorides), and form solid product compounds (e.g. MoS2) that occupy these edges and block the pathway of the corrosive substances.
The main applications of the present invention are e.g. energy boilers, gas turbines, engines and other combustion applications. The applications may include any applications having surfaces requiring high-temperature corrosion protective coatings. However, the invention can also be used to manufacture coatings for other types of protection than protection against corrosion. As an example, the coating of the invention will also protect the substrate from abrasion.
The thermal spraying may include, for example, flame spraying, wire arc spraying, plasma spraying, vacuum plasma spraying, high-velocity oxy-fuel spraying (HVOF), detonation spraying and cold spraying, or any other corresponding method.
Some preferred embodiments of the invention and their advantages are further illustrated using the following examples, which are not intended to limit the scope of the invention.
In this example, molybdenum was selected as the trap material (i.e. the subcomponent of the coating) due to the following aspects: It forms stable MoS2 in certain sulfur-containing environments, MoS2 is a known solid lubricant, and MoS2 is a close packed compound, where the molybdenum atoms are positioned between two levels of sulfur atom layers. These atom layers are capable of easily sliding in respect of each other, whereby the forming product compound is capable of blocking open positions of the lamellar boundaries and, thus, preventing the access of corrosive elements to the coating-substrate interface.
In
The function of the concept has been demonstrated using a simple laboratory test, wherein NiCr and Cr3C2—NiCr powders were coated using nano-molybdenum (the powders were milled together by using a ball mill so that the nano-Mo adhered to the surface of the NiCr or Cr3C2—NiCr powder).
Coatings were thermally sprayed from the manufactured powders using the HVOF method. The trapping material was successfully applied to the lamellar boundaries on the substrate, as can be seen from
The manufactured coatings (consisting of the uncoated powder and the trap-material-coated powder) were exposed to a sulfur-containing environment (a mixture of sodium sulfide-potassium sulfide is placed onto the coatings, T=650° C., where the sulfide mixture is in a molten state, and the exposure time is 1 week), after which the friction properties of the coatings were observed using a pin-on-disk-test (counter material: tool steel). The friction behavior of this sulfur trapping coating clearly differed from the coating manufactured from pure main component. The friction coefficient of the trapping coating is clearly lower and has a reducing trend, as can be observed from
The function of the concept of Example 2 was demonstrated using a simple laboratory test, where a NiCr powder was powder coated with nano-nickel (the powders were milled using a ball mill so that the nano-Ni adhered to the surface of the NiCr powder particles). The milling parameters of the powder were optimized for the used powder. The nickel layer was achieved also on the surface of the NiCr powder particles using a chemical, i.e. autocatalytic, coating procedure. The precipitating powder coating is, however, not pure nickel, but contains about 2-14% of phosphorous, depending on the used dipping procedure, and requires an “activating” treatment prior to coating of the powder particles, due to the passive surface of the NiCr powder.
The function and effectiveness of the layer of chemical nickel in a chlorine-containing environment was demonstrated using coating layers. The NiCr coatings were applied for the two different tests using a HVOF procedure, after which one of the NiCr coatings was further coated using a chemical nickel layer, this further coating corresponding to the above described powder coating using a trapping subcomponent. The NiCr without further coating and the chlorine trapping NiCr—Ni coating (NiCr+chemical Ni) were exposed to a high-temperature chlorine corrosion test (the surfaces of the coatings were covered with 100% KCl, at a temperature of 600° C., for an exposure time of 168 h).
The elemental composition map obtained using an energy-dispersive detector (EDS) of a scanning electron microscope reveals that the formed thin protecting layer (Cr2O3) has not been able to prevent the advancement of the chlorine to the lamellar boundaries. The EDS also reveals that vast amounts of chlorine, but no oxygen, are found from the almost loose lamellar boundaries.
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