High temperature coatings to mitigate weld cracking in resistance welding
11441039 · 2022-09-13
Assignee
Inventors
- Zhenke Teng (Troy, MI, US)
- Jason M. Brown (Goodrich, MI, US)
- Thomas R. Jones (Macomb Township, MI, US)
- Pei-Chung Wang (Troy, MI)
- Michael J. Karagoulis (Okemos, MI, US)
Cpc classification
C25D21/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C25D5/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C22C21/06
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C30/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C25D21/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B23K35/22
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A high temperature substrate coating to mitigate liquid metal embrittlement (LME) cracking in automobile vehicles includes a substrate. A coating is disposed on the substrate, the coating being one of a zinc-based material and an aluminum-based material, with the coating having a melting point of at least 500° C.
Claims
1. A method for application of a high temperature coating to mitigate liquid metal embrittlement (LME) cracking in automobile vehicles, comprising: applying a corrosion resistant material coating onto a substrate; identifying three factors occurring in unison when a liquid metal embrittlement (LME) cracking event is found, the LME cracking event occurring when a first factor defining a liquid metal phase of the corrosion resistant material coating applied to the substrate is present simultaneously with a second factor defining an occurrence of a threshold tensile strain in the substrate and a third factor defining a threshold microstructure sensitive to LME cracking; and modifying the first factor by selecting the corrosion resistant material as an Al-10Zn-10Mg material having a melting point greater than approximately 500° C. to mitigate occurrence of the LME cracking event in the substrate.
2. The method of claim 1, including applying the corrosion resistant material to the substrate using an electro-plating process.
3. The method of claim 1, including applying the corrosion resistant material to the substrate using a hot dip galvanizing process.
4. The method of claim 1, including selecting a Gen3 steel as a material of the substrate.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the corrosion resistant material coating has a coating thickness between 5 microns to 50 microns.
6. The method of claim 1, further comprising applying a chromate passivate layer over the corrosion resistant material coating.
7. The method of claim 6, further comprising applying a topcoat onto the chromate passivate layer.
8. The method of claim 6, further comprising prior to applying the corrosion resistant coating: dipping the substrate into a caustic bath; rinsing the substrate in a rinsing bath to remove remaining elements of the caustic bath; pickling the substrate in a pickling bath; rinsing the substrate in a second rinsing bath to remove excess pickling chemicals; dipping the substrate into a flux bath; and galvanizing the substrate by immersing the substrate into a heated bath of the corrosion resistant coating heated to a liquid state in order to apply the corrosion resistant coating onto the substrate.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(8) The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses.
(9) Referring to
(10) The LME cracking event 14 may occur for example if a steel substrate such as a Gen3 steel is coated with a low temperature zinc material, defined herein as having a melting point at or below approximately 491° C. Pure zinc has a melting point of approximately 419° C., which is increased with the addition of nickel material to achieve the low temperature melting point at or below approximately 491° C. The predetermined tensile strain 18 may then be reached in the low temperature coated steel such as during cooling shrinkage of the two materials following coating. The predetermined tensile strain 18 may also be reached during application of a strain during subsequent welding of the low temperature melting point metal such as when a resistance welding process is used to couple coated steel components. If the low temperature coating material is replaced by a “high temperature” coating material of the present disclosure defined herein as having a melting point at or above approximately 500° C., the resulting modified liquid metal phase 22 precludes the LME cracking event 14.
(11) Referring to
(12) A corrosion resistant material coating defining a high temperature coating layer 28 is applied to the substrate 26 using for example an electro-plating process or a hot dip galvanizing process. A coating thickness 30 of the high temperature coating layer 28 may range between approximately 5 microns to approximately 50 microns. According to several aspects the high temperature coating layer 28 may include one of multiple high temperature materials 32 individually having a melting point at or above approximately 500° C. The high temperature materials 32 may include but are not limited to one of a Zn-20Ni, a Zn-10Ni-15Fe, an Al-10Zn-10Mg and an Al-20Si material.
(13) According to several aspects a chromate passivate layer 34 may also be applied over the high temperature coating layer 28. A topcoat 36 is then commonly applied onto the chromate passivate layer 34. The coated component 24 may then be joined to similar coated components or to other metal components for example by a resistance welding process. With continuing reference to
(14) Referring to
(15) According to several aspects, the high temperature coating layer 28 may be applied using an electro-plating process. During the electro-plating process a metal coating of the high temperature coating layer 28 material is tippled onto the substrate 26 through a reduction of cations of the substrate 26 using a direct electric current. The substrate 26 acts as the cathode (negative electrode) of an electrolytic cell. The electrolyte may be a solution of a salt of the high temperature coating layer 28 and the anode (positive electrode) may be a block of the high temperature coating layer 28 material. The current inducing the electrolytic process is provided by an external power supply.
(16) Referring to
(17) Referring to
(18) Referring to
(19) A system and method for application of a high temperature coating to mitigate liquid metal embrittlement (LME) cracking of the present disclosure offers several advantages. These include a system and method to apply high temperature coatings (Zn-based and Al-based) which reduce coating layer melting for example during resistance welding of galvanized advanced high strength steels. Reducing coating layer melting consequently reduces liquid metal embrittlement cracking of a base material. Exemplary high temperature coating materials include Zn-20Ni, Zn-10Ni-15Fe, Al-10Zn-10Mg, Al-20Si. These high temperature coating materials increase a coating melting point to 500° C. or greater, thereby avoiding coating material melting during post-coating material cooling and during resistance spot welding.
(20) The description of the present disclosure is merely exemplary in nature and variations that do not depart from the gist of the present disclosure are intended to be within the scope of the present disclosure. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the present disclosure.