WEAR-RESISTANT COATING
20210078909 ยท 2021-03-18
Inventors
Cpc classification
C04B2235/3217
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2235/5436
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
C04B35/622
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
A method of coating an object, the method comprising: preparing a suspension comprising graphene nanoplatelets and a ceramic material; and spraying the suspension onto the object using high velocity oxy-fuel, HVOF, spraying in which the suspension is introduced as a feedstock.
Claims
1. A method of coating an object, the method comprising: preparing a suspension comprising graphene nanoplatelets and a ceramic material; and spraying the suspension onto the object using high velocity oxy-fuel, HVOF, spraying in which the suspension is introduced as a feedstock.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the suspension comprises graphene nanoplatelets having a thickness in the range 4 nm to 25 nm.
3. The method of claim 1, wherein the suspension comprises graphene nanoplatelets having an average thickness in the range 5 nm to 10 nm, or in the range 6 nm to 8 nm.
4. The method of claim 1, wherein the suspension comprises graphene nanoplatelets having an average diameter in the range 1 m to 7 m, or in the range 4 m to 6 m.
5. The method of claim 1, wherein the ceramic material is or comprises alumina; and/or gamma-phase alumina.
6. (canceled)
7. The method of claim 5, wherein after SHVOF spraying the ceramic material comprises at least 50 wt % or at least 70 wt % or at least 90 wt % gamma-phase alumina.
8. The method of claim 1, wherein the wt % of graphene nanoplatelets in the suspension is in the range 1% to 30% of the wt % of the ceramic material in the suspension.
9. The method of claim 1, wherein spraying the suspension using SHVOF spraying comprises injecting the suspension into a flame, and wherein the ratio of flame power to injection flow rate of the suspension is between 0.5 and 1.5 kW(ml/min).sup.1, or between 0.8 and 1.2 kW(ml/min).sup.1 and/or ii) the flame has a flame power between 80 kW and 120 kW.
10. (canceled)
11. The method of any preceding claim, wherein preparing the suspension comprises: preparing a first suspension comprising the ceramic material; preparing a second suspension comprising the graphene nanoplatelets; and combining the first and second suspensions.
12. The method of claim 11, wherein combining the first and second suspensions comprises adding the second suspension to the first suspension.
13. The method of claim 1, wherein the suspension is an aqueous suspension.
14. The method of claim 1, wherein the ceramic material comprises particles having a particle size in the range 1 m to 20 m, or in the range 1 m to 10 m.
15. A wear-resistant object comprising a wear-resistant coating, the coating comprising a ceramic material and graphene nanoplatelets; wherein the coating has been applied to the object using the method of claim 1.
16. The object of claim 15, wherein the porosity of the coating is less than 5%, or preferably less than 1%.
17. The object of claim 15, wherein the coating has a thickness in the range 20 m to 200 m, or in the range 50 m to 70 m.
18. A method of coating an object, the method comprising: preparing a suspension comprising graphene nanoplatelets; and spraying the suspension onto the object using high velocity oxy-fuel, HVOF, spraying in which the suspension is introduced as a feedstock.
19. The method of claim 18, wherein spraying the suspension using HVOF spraying comprises injecting the suspension into a flame having a flame power of between 20 kW and 40 kW, and preferably 25 kW.
20. The method of claim 18, wherein the injection flow rate is between 25 ml/min and 50 ml/min.
21. The method of claim 18, wherein the suspension has a wt % of graphene nanoplatelets of between 5% and 10%.
22. The method of claim 18, wherein the suspension comprises substantially no ceramic material.
23. (canceled)
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0039] The invention is described in further detail below by way of example and with reference to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
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[0057] In an embodiment, an HVOF apparatus such as apparatus 100 was used to deposit a HVOF sprayed coating comprising ceramic material and graphene nanoplatelets in a suspension. In this example, alumina was used as the primary constituent of the sprayed composite, but other ceramic materials may also be used. For example, TiO.sub.2 (anatase), TiO.sub.2 (rutile), Cr.sub.2O.sub.3, ZrO.sub.2 and TiN may be used, by producing a suspension of ceramic and graphene nanoplatelets using a similar method to that described below in relation to a graphene-alumina suspension. Alumina is known to be useful as a wear resistant coating, with good dry sliding wear properties, low cost, and good sprayability by HVOF. Alumina feedstock typically comprises the desirable alpha phase of alumina, which has the best wear performance of the various forms of alumina.
[0058] Given the high temperatures of the HVOF process, it is difficult to retain the alpha phase, and often the gamma phase forms, with poorer wear properties owing to its lower fracture toughness and hardness. Avoiding the gamma phase requires careful selection of typically lower flame energy parameters, which in turn can exacerbate the prevalence of porosity in the coating and hinder coating properties. Embodiments of the invention result in improved wear-resistance of an SHVOF alumina coating with a large percentage of gamma alumina, via the addition of GNPs to the feedstock. In order to demonstrate this, a feedstock was prepared by dispersing GNPs in a suspension of alpha alumina, prior to SHVOF spraying onto steel substrates, as described in more detail below. The wear performance was characterised in comparison to an equivalent alumina coating without GNPs, and the distribution and physical state of GNPs before and after spraying was measured by detailed Raman spectroscopic mapping.
Preparation of the Suspension
[0059] A SHVOF sprayable suspension requires a good balance between surface charge (zeta potential), weight loading, pH, viscosity and shelf life. The final suspension must not separate during spraying or settle during storage and must have good flowability (for example 50-100 ml/min under 3 bars pressure) for spray deposition.
[0060] In the present study, a commercially pure (99.9%) alpha alumina feedstock was sourced from a specialised ceramic material supplier (Baikowski, France) with a D50 particle size of 1 m (a D50 particle size in the range 1-10 m may be used). The sub-micron powder was mixed with triple de-ionised water (other appropriate suspension media may be used) at 35 wt % (a % wt between 20 and 50 wt % may be used). The mixture was thoroughly mixed (in this example, with a digital mixer at a fixed rpm for three hours).
[0061] In order to confirm a stable suspension was achieved, the suspension was tested for sedimentation rate over a range of time periods in test tubes. In addition, the suspension was measured for electrokinetic potential (zeta potential) and modified to achieve a zeta potential between 40 mV and 40 mV. This was achieved by adding an acid or base solution to alter the pH, which affects the zeta potential. An additive (surfactant) was also added to the suspension to establish the desired zeta potential. A stabilising additive, such as di-ammonium hydrogen citrate may be used if the solution is not stable, for example between 0.01 and 0.05 wt % (relative to the solution) of additive may be added to the solution.
[0062] Once a stable alumina suspension was ready, a separate graphene nanoplatelet suspension was prepared.
[0063] Graphene nanoplatelets (GNP) having a 6-8 nm thickness (20 graphene layers) and 5 m average diameter (ABCR product no. AB 304022) were used in this example, but. nanoplatelets having a thickness in the range 4 nm to 25 nm, and an average diameter in the range 1 m to 7 m may alternatively be used.
[0064] The GNP powder was dispersed in deionised water at a ratio of (1:105) and ultrasonicated at 20 kHz for 50 minutes. The dispersed GNP suspension was then introduced in the previously prepared alumina suspension and mixed in the digital mixer for a further 30 minutes. The ratio of GNP to alumina (by weight) is this recipe was maintained at 1:100 (but ratios up to 30:100 may be used).
[0065] The GNP+alumina suspension was then tested again for settlement and the zeta potential was measured to ensure a stable suspension was achieved in the above steps. If the solution is not stable, a stabilising additive may be added, as described above. The suspension was transferred to the suspension feeder vessel and agitated continuously under 3 bar pressure during the entire spray runs.
Coating Preparation
[0066] SHVOF coatings of pure alumina and alumina+1% by weight GNP were sprayed onto steel substrates with dimensions of 60252 mm. Substrates were grit blasted and cleaned with alcohol before coating. A modified UTP TopGun HVOF spray system, with a 0.3 mm suspension injector diameter was used for spraying. Hydrogen fuel was combusted in a 22 mm long chamber, into which the suspension was fed at a pressure of 3 bar (4-5 bar may be used) from a mechanically stirred, pressurised chamber. Injection flow rate was 100 ml/min for all tests (other flow rates, such as 80 to 120 ml/min may be used). Hydrogen was used as the fuel to combust with oxygen in the combustion chamber 101. Oxygen and hydrogen flow rates into the combustion chamber 101 were 306 and 611 l/min respectively, equating to a 100% combustion stoichiometry and 101 kW flame power (alternatively a stoichiometry in the range 90-100% may be used and/or a flame power in the range 80 kW to 120 kW). Substrates were mounted on a rotating carousel at 73 rpm (substrate speed of 1 m/s), while the spray gun was traversed perpendicular to the substrate movement direction, at a speed of 5 mm/s (speeds between 1 mm/s and 10 mm/s may be used), resulting in an interpass step of 4 mm, until a coating thickness of approximately 60 m was achieved (alternatively a coating thickness between 20 and 80 m may be applied). The stand-off distance was fixed as 85 mm for both coatings.
Coating Characterisation
[0067] Cross-sectional coating analysis was performed after sequential SiC grinding and diamond polishing with a final grit size of 1 m. All samples analysed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) were platinum coated before inspection to provide sufficient electrical conductivity. Microscopy was performed using an FEI XL30 in secondary electron (SE) and back-scattered electron (BSE) modes and Hitachi S-2600 SEM in SE mode. X-ray diffraction (XRD) was performed with a Bruker D500 using Cu K radiation, wavelength 0.154 nm, and scanning from 5-120 20 values, with a step size of 0.04 2 and a step time of 24 s. Raman spectroscopy was performed using a Horiba Jobin Yvon LabRAM HR spectrometer equipped with an automated xyz stage (Mrzhuser). Spectra were acquired using a 532 nm laser at 2.5 mW power, a 100 objective and a 300 m confocal pinhole. To simultaneously scan a range of Raman shifts, a 600 lines/mm rotatable diffraction grating along a path length of 800 mm was employed. Spectra were detected using a Synapse CCD detector (1024 pixels) thermoelectrically cooled to 60 C. Before the spectra collection, the instrument was calibrated using the Rayleigh line at 0 cm.sup.1 and a standard Si(100) reference band at 520.7 cm.sup.1. During mapping, spectra were collected between 100 and 3000 cm.sup.1 across an area of 2424 m with a grid spacing of 1 m along both the x and y axes, a total of 625 spectra per map. As each individual spectrum was collected for 20 seconds, repeated once in order to automatically remove the spikes due to cosmic rays, the whole map required approximately 7 hours of acquisition time. The height intensity of the D (1190-1470 cm.sup.1), G bands (1480-1700 cm.sup.1) and 2D bands (2600-2800 cm.sup.1), which are discussed in more detail below, and the corresponding intensity ratios, ID/IG and I2D/IG, were determined within the mapped cross-sectional area. Representative spectra were extracted from the mapped data set, corrected for fluorescence by application of a polynomial baseline subtraction and normalised to the intensity of the G band for comparison. The position and width of spectral features was determined using the Lorenzian peak fitting function in Labspec 6. Fracture surfaces were prepared by gradual bending of the substrate in a vice with the coating attached, yielded fracture surfaces in directions perpendicular, i.e. cross-sectional, and parallel to the top surface. Wear rates were measured by 5 contact profiles of each wear track, taken using a Talysurf CLI 1000 (Taylor Hobson) with a lateral resolution of 0.5 m. Average cross-sectional area of the profiles was used to calculate total volume worn.
Wear Testing
[0068] Ball-on-flat dry sliding wear testing was performed with a CETR UMT-2 micro-tribometer (CETR, USA), using a 6.3 mm diameter alpha-phase alumina ball counterbody (Dejay Ltd UK). Coatings were worn after sequential polishing using SiC followed by diamond to a final stage of 1 m grit. An initial two tests were performed at 10 N load given the expected severe wear regime for the alumina sample at this parameter. Further wear tests were performed using a load range from 5-35 N and 10 mm stroke length, (5 mm track length) in order to find the transition points from mild to severe load for the both the pure alumina and the alumina+GNP coatings. Sliding speed was 10 mm/s in all tests.
ResultsCharacterisation of Sprayed Coatings
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[0070] Based on SEM images (
[0071] In order to (i) confirm and spatially locate the incorporation of GNPs into the coating subsequent to thermal spraying and (ii) determine the potential impact of thermal spraying on the structural properties of the GNP in the coating, Raman spectroscopic mapping was performed on a polished cross-section of the alumina+GNP coating.
[0072] The Raman spectrum of GNPs is dominated by three spectroscopic features: the G banda high frequency E2g optical phonon observed in all forms of nanoscale carbon at 1580 cm.sup.1 (peak 405 in
[0073] The D, G and 2D band maps confirm that GNPs were present throughout the entire cross-section of the coating, with some evidence of clustering into 5-10 m aggregates observed. The experimentally-determined penetration of the laser into the sample under the applied experimental conditions was of the order of 10 m and thus differences in the observed intensity of bands in the lateral directions were likely to reflect the relative location of GNP in the axial direction (i.e. depth). However, in all recorded spectra, the presence of GNP was confirmed.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Correlated I.sub.D/I.sub.G and I.sub.2D/I.sub.G values for the GNP-containing materials. I.sub.D/I.sub.G I.sub.2D/I.sub.G mean range L.sub.D/nm mean range GNP 0.18 0.08 0.06-0.54 28.5 0.23 0.02 0.17-0.47 powder GNP 0.22 0.08 0.01-0.47 25.7 0.21 0.04 0.09-0.34 dispersion alumina- 0.70 0.16 0.27-1.17 14.4 0.32 0.09 0.01-0.60 GNP coating
[0074] Comparison of the mean Raman spectra of GNP (
[0075] In addition to an increase in the mean ID:IG ratio from 0.180.08 to 0.700.16 (
[0076] The results of X-ray diffraction (XRD) are shown in
ResultsWear Tests at 10 N
[0077] For initial wear tests, a load of 10 N and sliding speed of 10 mm/s, and 4 hours wear time were chosen, as previous work had shown that this parameter caused an unmodified alumina coating to enter into a severe wear regime. Hence, these parameters were chosen in order to determine if GNP reinforcement fundamentally altered the wear mechanism. Two repeats were performed for each test. Specific wear rates of the wear tracks on coating and counterbodies, based on volume measurement, are shown in
[0078] After 4 hours of wear, the alumina/GNP composite coatings yielded a specific wear rate more than two orders of magnitude lower than the pure alumina coatings, from 310.sup.5 to 1-210.sup.7 mm.sup.3/Nm. In all cases, the specific wear rate of the counterbody, composed of alpha alumina, was lower than that of the corresponding coating, reflecting the superior performance of the alpha alumina counterbody. Ball wear rates were also reduced by more than two orders of magnitude for the alumina/GNP wear tests. SEM images of coating wear tracks are shown in
[0079] A wear track characteristic of a severe wear regime can be seen on the pure alumina coating (
[0080] Coefficients of friction for one of each of the two test types can be seen in
ResultsWear with Increasing Loads
[0081] Initial testing at 10 N and 4 hour wear time revealed a two order of magnitude improvement in specific wear rate with the addition of 1 wt % GNPs to the alumina coating, via the transition to an apparent mild wear mechanism. However to fully characterise the wear behaviour of the two coatings, and specifically to determine the difference in wear mechanism transition points, wear tests were repeated using a range of loads.
[0082] After reducing wear test load on the pure alumina coating to 7.5 N, the wear rate remained high, with a deep wear track and track topography typical of a severe wear regime. Upon reducing to 5 N load, a shallow wear track, with a specific wear rate two orders of magnitude lower than at 7.5 N, indicative of a mild regime was produced, implying the transition for the pure alumina coating between mild and severe wear exists between loads of 5 and 7.5 N. The alumina+GNP coating was then tested with increasing loads. For between 12.5 and 30 N, no significant difference in wear track volume was seen, resulting in specific wear rates relatively consistent between these parameters. At 35 N, wear testing resulted in very high friction, and the test was stopped after 2.5 minutes to avoid machine damage. Specific wear rate at 35 N was measured at approximately two orders of magnitude higher than tests between 12.5 and 30 N. The transition point from mild to severe wear for the Alumina+GNP coating was hence measured to be between 30 and 35 N, hence 4-5 times higher than for the alumina coating.
[0083] To explain the shift in transition point, SEM images were taken of the wear track surfaces of 25, 30 and 35 N tests on the alumina+GNP composite coating, as shown in
[0084] At 30 N, a relatively smooth wear track was produced, with grooves characteristic of plastic flow, but with no evidence of intergranular fracture or wear debris. The 25 N wear track showed a similar morphology to the 30 N sample, albeit with smaller grooves indicative of plastic flow, and again no evidence of intergranular fracture. At 35 N load, the wear track is typical of a severe wear regime, with extensive wear debris, and a rough, pocketed surface characteristic of grain pull out following intergranular fracture. Flat regions characteristic of plastic flow are also present.
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[0086] For the pure alumina coating, at 7.5 and 10 N, a rapid initial increase in friction was observed, followed by a gradual decrease towards a steady state coefficient of friction of 0.5. In contrast, the 5 N sample experienced only a gradual initial increase to 0.3, followed by a steady but gradually increasing coefficient of friction. For the GNP coating, all tests except at 35 N showed an initial friction increase at a shallower rate than the pure alumina coating at 7.5 and 10 N. The 35 N coating displayed an immediately sharp rise in friction to 0.7, at which point the test was stopped. Generally, the mean friction level during wear reflects both the load and the regime of the wear process (i.e. highest for severe wear, lower for mild wear with high load, and lower again for mild wear and low loads).
ResultsCoating a Stainless Steel Substrate Using a GNP Suspension
[0087] Direct suspension spraying of graphene nano-platelets (GNPs) onto a stainless steel substrate has also been carried out using high velocity oxy-fuel, HVOF, spraying. In this manner a GNP coating has been deposited on a stainless steel substrate.
[0088] The suspension did not include a ceramic such as alumina or TiO.sub.2. A GNP suspension was prepared in a manner as described above in the preparation of the suspension section, except that it was not subsequently mixed with a separate suspension of alumina. A HVOF flame power of 25 kW was used.
[0089] Scanning electron microscope (SEM) top surface images of deposition at 25 kW flame power are shown in
[0090] It is found that the GNPs withstand the interaction with the hot jet/flame without melting. They are found to stay attached to the stainless steel substrate throughout the deposition and analysis processes. The coating evenly covers areas of 50 m.sup.2 in the SEM images. There are some defects in the coating (seen as the darker areas in
[0091] Additional information about the coating deposited on the stainless steel substrate is provided from further analyses carried out using Raman spectroscopy. With this technique it is possible to discriminate between various states of carbon and to investigate whether graphitisation has occurred during deposition. A Raman spectrum of the deposited coating is shown in
ResultsSuspension Spraying of TiO.sub.2 and TiO.sub.2+GNP Nanocomposites
[0092] Suspension spaying of GNPs+TiO.sub.2 (titania) has been carried out to form nanocomposite coatings using HVOF spraying. The process steps involved in the deposition are similar to those described herein for the alumina and GNP suspension. The mechanical and wear characteristics for the TiO.sub.2+GNP coating have been analysed and compared to TiO.sub.2-only coatings, and are presented in Table 2 below.
[0093] As is evident from the results presented in Table 2, when compared to titania-only coatings, titania+GNP coatings exhibit: higher microhardness, higher fracture toughness and lower specific wear rate
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 mechanical and wear characteristics of titania + GNP coatings compared to titania-only coatings Coating Counterbody Micro- Fracture Specific Specific hardness Toughness Wear Rate Wear Rate Coating (HV.sub.0.025) (MPa m.sup.1/2) (mm.sup.3/Nm 10.sup.3) (mm.sup.3/Nm) Titania 270 70 0.58 0.83 3.60 0.99 Negligible Titania + 352 48 1.04 0.57 0.78 0.30 Negligible GNP
[0094] The presence of GNPs in the titania+GNP coating has been assessed using Raman spectroscopy. The results are presented in
Discussion of ResultsRaman Spectroscopy
[0095] Raman spectroscopic mapping revealed that the sprayed coating contained a homogeneous distributed mixture of GNP forms within the analysed cross-section. Statistical treatment of data extracted from the spectral maps indicated that the mean ID:IG ratio increased from 0.180.08 in the unprocessed GNP to 0.700.16 in the coating, corresponding to a 50% reduction in distance between defects, LD, from 28.5 to 14.4 nm according to LD=1.8109.4.(ID/IG)1 [3]. For perspective, a fully disordered graphene layer may have an ID:IG ratio of over 3 [2]. The ratio of D and G band intensities is often used to quantify defectiveness in graphene related systems, such as GNP, and is known to vary with the amount of disorder (deviation from an ideal sp2-hybridised carbon lattice due to the incorporation of point defects, such as resonant scatterers and substitutional atoms) within a given graphitic plane. Whilst distributions in the ID:IG ratio are typical in nanoscale carbon materials, the shift in the mean and broadening of the range of ID:IG subsequent to processing indicates that the thermal spraying procedure results in moderate changes in the structural ordering within the GNP, as has been observed previously in analogous studies on the incorporation of CNTs in alumina by HVOF [4]. Raman analysis of the GNP after dispersion but before spraying (line 402 in
Discussion of ResultsWear Behaviour
[0096] Wear testing showed a two order of magnitude reduction in specific wear rate due to the addition of GNPs at 10 N load, explained by a significant shift in the transition point between mild and severe wear regimes, from between 5 and 7.5 N for pure alumina, and between 30 and 35 N for the alumina+GNP composite. Given the 35 N test was stopped after only 1.5 metres wear distance, significant wear debris is visible, which has been freshly removed from the coating structure by the wear process, and has not yet undergone further deformation. It is therefore clear that brittle fracture of the coating, which leads to grain pull-out, is prevented until a much higher load point in the case of the alumina+GNP coating. The friction data, for example in
[0097] Thus it has been shown that, surprisingly, a composite coating of a ceramic and graphene nanoplatelets can be sprayed by suspension HVOF spraying, without the nanoplatelets disintegrating in the high temperature of the HVOF flame.
Coatings according to embodiments have good coverage, and provide much greater wear-resistance than a pure alumina coating applied by HVOF spraying.
[0098] Other embodiments are intentionally within the scope of the invention as defined by the appended claims.
REFERENCES
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