Patent classifications
C23C10/38
Sliding component having wear-resistant coating
A sliding component having a wear-resistant coating includes a sliding component formed of a Ni alloy, and a wear-resistant coating provided on a sliding surface of the sliding component. The wear-resistant coating has, at least on the surface side thereof, an Al-containing Co alloy layer which contains Co as a main component, at least one of W, Ni, Mo, Fe, Si, and C, Cr, and 0.3% by mass or more and 26% by mass or less of Al.
Coated part comprising a protective coating based on MAX phases
A coated part includes a metallic substrate, a thermal barrier comprising a ceramic material and covering the metallic substrate, wherein the coated part further includes a protective coating covering the thermal barrier, the protective coating including, in a first region, a first MAX phase, denoted PZ2, of formula (Zr.sub.xTi.sub.1-x).sub.2AlC or a first MAX phase, denoted PC2, of formula (Cr.sub.xTi.sub.1-x).sub.2AlC with x non-zero and less than or equal to 1 in the MAX phases PZ2 and PC2, and the protective coating includes, in a second region covering the first region, a second MAX phase of formula Ti.sub.2AlC.
Coated part comprising a protective coating based on MAX phases
A coated part includes a metallic substrate, a thermal barrier comprising a ceramic material and covering the metallic substrate, wherein the coated part further includes a protective coating covering the thermal barrier, the protective coating including, in a first region, a first MAX phase, denoted PZ2, of formula (Zr.sub.xTi.sub.1-x).sub.2AlC or a first MAX phase, denoted PC2, of formula (Cr.sub.xTi.sub.1-x).sub.2AlC with x non-zero and less than or equal to 1 in the MAX phases PZ2 and PC2, and the protective coating includes, in a second region covering the first region, a second MAX phase of formula Ti.sub.2AlC.
Large-area copper nanofoam with hierarchical structure for use as electrode
A facile method is based on a pack-cementation process using large-area copper foil instead of copper powder. By controlling a pack-cementation time and an amount of alloying element (e.g., aluminum), a hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be created. When coated with tin active material, the hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be used as an advanced lithium-ion battery anode. A coin-cell test exhibited a four-fold higher areal capacity (e.g., 7.4 milliamp-hours per square centimeter without any performance degradation up to 20 cycles) as compared to a traditional graphite anode.
Large-area copper nanofoam with hierarchical structure for use as electrode
A facile method is based on a pack-cementation process using large-area copper foil instead of copper powder. By controlling a pack-cementation time and an amount of alloying element (e.g., aluminum), a hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be created. When coated with tin active material, the hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be used as an advanced lithium-ion battery anode. A coin-cell test exhibited a four-fold higher areal capacity (e.g., 7.4 milliamp-hours per square centimeter without any performance degradation up to 20 cycles) as compared to a traditional graphite anode.
Copper Nanofoam with Large Surface Area and Hierarchical Structure for Use as Electrode
A facile method is based on a pack-cementation process using large-area copper foil instead of copper powder. By controlling a pack-cementation time and an amount of alloying element (e.g., aluminum), a hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be created. When coated with tin active material, the hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be used as an advanced lithium-ion battery anode. A coin-cell test exhibited a four-fold higher areal capacity (e.g., 7.4 milliamp-hours per square centimeter without any performance degradation up to 20 cycles) as compared to a traditional graphite anode.
Copper Nanofoam with Large Surface Area and Hierarchical Structure for Use as Electrode
A facile method is based on a pack-cementation process using large-area copper foil instead of copper powder. By controlling a pack-cementation time and an amount of alloying element (e.g., aluminum), a hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be created. When coated with tin active material, the hierarchical microporous or nanoporous copper can be used as an advanced lithium-ion battery anode. A coin-cell test exhibited a four-fold higher areal capacity (e.g., 7.4 milliamp-hours per square centimeter without any performance degradation up to 20 cycles) as compared to a traditional graphite anode.