ENVIRONMENTAL BARRIER COATING FOR ENHANCED RESISTANCE TO ATTACK BY MOLTEN SILICATE DEPOSITS
20200056489 ยท 2020-02-20
Assignee
Inventors
- Elisa M. Zaleski (Manchester, CT, US)
- Richard Wesley Jackson (Groton, CT, US)
- Xia Tang (West Hartford, CT)
Cpc classification
F05D2300/211
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2220/32
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F01D5/288
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F23R3/007
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/2108
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/6033
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B41/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/522
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/522
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F05D2300/222
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C23C26/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B2103/0021
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/5042
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/5015
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/52
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C04B41/89
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F05D2240/30
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B2103/0021
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F23R2900/00018
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2240/12
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F05D2300/611
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B41/5042
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
F01D5/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
C04B41/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Abstract
An environmental barrier coating, comprising a substrate containing silicon; an environmental barrier layer applied to said substrate; said environmental barrier layer comprising a rare earth composition.
Claims
1. An environmental barrier coating, comprising: a substrate containing silicon; an environmental barrier layer applied to said substrate; said environmental barrier layer comprising a rare earth composition.
2. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, wherein said substrate comprises a ceramic matrix composite material.
3. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, wherein said environmental barrier layer comprises a rare earth apatite.
4. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, wherein said environmental barrier layer comprises RE.sub.8Ca.sub.2(SiO.sub.4).sub.6O.sub.2.
5. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, wherein said environmental barrier layer comprises an apatite comprising Ca.sub.5F(PO.sub.4).sub.3.
6. The environmental barrier coating of claim 5, wherein said Ca can be substituted with Mg, Fe, Na, Sr, and Mn.
7. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, wherein said substrate comprises at least one of a turbine vane and a turbine blade.
8. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, further comprising: a protective layer applied on said environmental barrier coating.
9. The environmental barrier coating of claim 1, wherein said environmental barrier layer comprises an apatite comprising M.sup.I.sub.4M.sup.II.sub.6(SiO.sub.4).sub.6X.sub.2 in which M.sup.I are seven-fold coordinated cation sites and M.sup.II are nine-fold coordinated cation sites, and X is an anion sites that is distinct from the oxygen within the silica tetrahedral.
10. The environmental barrier coating of claim 9, wherein RE ions sit on both the M.sup.I and M.sup.II sites and Ca sits on the M.sup.I site fitting the formula RE.sub.8Ca.sub.2(SiO.sub.4).sub.6O.sub.2.
11. The environmental barrier coating of claim 9 wherein said apatite further comprises Mg and Fe additions.
12. The environmental barrier coating of claim 11 wherein said apatite comprises Ca.sub.2-x-yMg.sub.xFe.sub.y where 0>x>1 and 0>y>1.
13. The environmental barrier coating of claim 9 wherein at least one of Ca, Mg, Fe, Sr, Na, K, Ti, and Zr is combined with the rare earth composition.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0019]
[0020]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0021] Referring now to
[0022] The substrate 12 can be constructed from materials containing silicon and can be a ceramic matrix composite material, a monolithic ceramic, a silicon-based or silicon containing ceramic substrate or a silicon containing metal alloy. In an exemplary embodiment, the substrata 12 can be silicon containing ceramic material such as, for example, silicon carbide, silicon nitride, silicon oxy-nitride and silicon aluminum oxy-nitride, alkaline earth or rare earth silicate glasses or glass ceramics and combinations thereof. Examples can include barium strontium alumino silicate, strontium alumino silicate, lithium alumino silicate, aluminosilicate, mullite, yttrium silicate, ytterbium silicate, and the like. In accordance with a particular embodiment, the silicon containing ceramic substrate comprises a silicon containing matrix with reinforcing materials 16 such as fibers, particles and the like and, more particularly, a silicon based matrix which is fiber-reinforced. Particularly suitable ceramic substrates are a silicon carbide fiber-reinforced silicon carbide matrix, a carbon fiber-reinforced silicon carbide matrix and a silicon carbide fiber-reinforced silicon nitride matrix. Particularly useful silicon-metal alloys for use as substrates for the article 14 can include molybdenum-silicon alloys, niobium-silicon alloys, iron-silicon alloys, zirconium, hafnium, titanium, chromium, tungsten, boron, platinum, tantalum, TiSi alloys and MoSi, NbSi and FeSi alloys.
[0023] Referring also to
[0024] The environmental barrier layer 18 can include a rare earth (RE) composition, such as rare earth apatites. In an exemplary embodiment the apatite can comprise M.sup.I.sub.4M.sup.II.sub.6(SiO.sub.4).sub.6X.sub.2 in which M.sup.I are seven-fold coordinated cation sites and M.sup.II are nine-fold coordinated cation sites, and X is an anion sites that is distinct from the oxygen within the silica tetrahedral. In another exemplary embodiment RE ions sit on both the M.sup.I and M.sup.II sites while Ca sits on the M.sup.I site fitting the formula RE.sub.8Ca.sub.2(SiO.sub.4).sub.6O.sub.2. Alternatively, the composition may be modified by Mg and Fe additions, to include Ca.sub.2-x-yMg.sub.xFe.sub.y where 0>x>1 and 0>y>1. Such that in the RE.sub.8(Ca.sub.2-x-yMg.sub.xFe.sub.y)(SiO.sub.4).sub.6O.sub.2, the Ca, Mg, Fe composition is chosen to maximize chemical stability with the deposits in which the primary chemical specials are CaMgFeAlSiO. Alternatively, elements such as Ca, Mg, Fe, Sr, Na, K, Ti, and Zr may be added with the rare earth elements. Particularly, the environmental barrier layer 18 can include RE.sub.8Ca.sub.2(SiO.sub.4).sub.6O.sub.2. In another exemplary embodiment the environmental barrier layer 18 can include an apatite comprising Ca.sub.5F(PO.sub.4).sub.3. The Ca can be substituted with Mg, Fe, Na, Sr, and Mn. These substitutions can occur in the RE.sub.8Ca.sub.2 (SiO.sub.4).sub.6O.sub.2 apatite.
[0025] The environmental barrier layer 18 can be present on the substrate 12 at a thickness of greater than or equal to about 0.5 mils (0.0005 inch), preferably between about 3 to about 30 mils and ideally between about 3 to about 5 mils.
[0026] The environmental barrier layer 18 can be applied by preparing a surface 20 of the substrate 14. The environmental barrier layer 18 can be applied to the substrate 12 by use of suspension plasma spray, electron-beam physical vapor deposition, or an air plasma spray, as well as, slurry based method including dipping, painting and spraying.
[0027] In an alternative embodiment, the environmental barrier coating 10 can be formed as multiple combinations of layers 18. In another alternative embodiment, the environmental barrier layer 18 can be multiple layers 24 of RE based on varying RE concentration. In another alternative embodiment, the environmental barrier coating 10 can be multiple layers of RE based on varying the deposition technique, resulting a varying material properties by layer(s). In an exemplary embodiment the environmental barrier layer 18 can include multiple layers 24 applied by applying a suspension plasma spray layer and then an air plasma spray layer.
[0028] In an exemplary embodiment, a bond layer can be added in between the environmental barrier layer 18 and the substrate 12 on top of surface 20 for adhesion and oxidation protection.
[0029] An advantage of utilizing the disclosed environmental barrier coating 10 composition that is near equilibrium with the silicate melt can include limited mixing of the silicate melt and the environmental barrier coating 10, thus reducing swelling and phase change in the coating. Another advantage of utilizing the disclosed environmental barrier coating 10 composition that is near equilibrium with the silicate melt can include a limited chemical reaction between the environmental barrier coating 10 and the silicate melt that can result in limited new phase formation. This limitation can decrease the strain induced in the top layer of the coating 10 as a result of a mismatch of coefficient of thermal expansion between the reaction products, thus increasing the life of the coating 10.
[0030] There has been provided a coating. While the coating has been described in the context of specific embodiments thereof, other unforeseen alternatives, modifications, and variations may become apparent to those skilled in the art having read the foregoing description. Accordingly, it is intended to embrace those alternatives, modifications, and variations which tall within the broad scope of the appended claims.