SUPERLUBRICIOUS CARBON FILMS DERIVED FROM NATURAL GAS
20190314803 ยท 2019-10-17
Inventors
- Ali Erdemir (Naperville, IL, US)
- Osman Eryilmaz (Plainfield, IL, US)
- Jair Giovanni Ramirez Gonzalez (San Jose, CA, US)
Cpc classification
B01J37/347
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C23C14/024
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J35/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01J37/348
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C23C30/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C14/35
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C23C28/343
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
B01J37/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C23C28/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01J35/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A nanocomposite coating that in turn extract self-replenishing (or -healing), superlubricious carbon film directly from natural gas or hydrocarbon gas in mechanical systems. The coating deposits on sealing and sliding surfaces reducing friction and wear. The result is a reduction in inefficiency, machine breakdown, and adverse environmental impact.
Claims
1. A method of extracting lubricious carbon films from a hydrocarbon gas comprising the steps of: coating sliding surfaces in a mechanical system with a catalytically active material; pressurizing the sealed mechanical system operating with the hydrocarbon gas to a predetermined pressure; maintaining the temperature of the mechanical system in a predetermined range; filling the mechanical system with the hydrocarbon gas, the hydrocarbon gas containing approximately 70-90 percent methane, approximately 0-20% ethane, approximately 0-8% carbon, approximately 0-0.2% oxygen, approximately 0-5% nitrogen and approximately 0-5% hydrogen sulphide; and operating said mechanical system.
2. The method of claim 1 wherein the catalytically active material is selected from the group consisting of VNNi, VNCu, MoNCu, VNCo, MoNCo and combinations thereof.
3. The method of claim 1 wherein the step of coating includes using a physical vapor deposition system to form a coating of a predetermined thickness.
4. The method of claim 3 wherein the predetermined thickness is between approximately 3 nanometer to approximately 50 micrometer.
5. The method of claim 3 wherein the physical deposition system includes cathodic arc PVD, High Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering (HIPIMS), ion plating, diode or triode magnetron sputtering, pulse DC and hybrids of the aforementioned methods.
6. The method of claim 1 wherein the predetermined pressure is approximately 3500 psi.
7. The method of claim 1 wherein the predetermined pressure is greater than approximately 14.7 psi and less than approximately 3500 psi.
8. The method of claim 1 wherein the predetermined pressure is greater 3500 psi.
9. The method of claim 1 wherein the hydrocarbon gas further includes moisture and sulfur dioxide.
10. The method of claim 1 wherein the temperature range is between approximately 18 degrees Celsius to approximately 500 degrees Celsius.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0007] The patent or application file contains at least one drawing executed in color. Copies of this patent or patent application publication with color drawing(s) will be provided by the Office upon request and payment of necessary fee. These and further aspects of the invention and their advantages can be discerned in the following detailed description, in which like characters denote like parts and in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0026] Friction and wear are major causes of energy and material losses in moving mechanical systems and often are the causes for inefficiency, machine breakdown, and adverse environmental impact. Accordingly, great efforts have been devoted to minimizing the adverse impacts of friction and wear by developing effective solid and liquid lubricants. Among the many solid lubricants, carbon-based natural and man-made materials are shown to be rather effective in reducing friction and wear. For example, both graphite and diamond provide very low friction and wear in open air despite one being super-soft while the other is super-hard. Furthermore, recently discovered fullerenes, graphene, nanotubes, nano-onions, and carbon-based coatings such as nanocrystalline diamond, diamond-like carbon, and carbon nitride all combine many of the desirable friction and wear properties of natural diamond and graphite, hence they have sparked tremendous interest both scientifically and industrially in recent years. In particular, graphene, nanotube, and nano-onions were shown to possess some of the lowest friction and wear coefficients when present on contacting surfaces that are in relative motion.
[0027] The concept of compressing gaseous media is more than 100 years old and it is used extensively today for all types of mechanical systems such as compressors, pneumatic power tools, refrigerators/air conditioners, turbochargers, heat pumps, in addition to transporting solid, liquid, and gaseous media from one place to another. There are numerous compressor designs available including centrifugal, scroll, diaphragm, reciprocating piston, rotary screw, and vane, etc. In all of these, there exist some components that rub, rotate, or slide against one another. In particular, sealing faces or surfaces are the most critical since they are responsible for achieving and maintaining high pressure differentials. Most current seal materials are made of low-friction polymers (like Teflon, polyethylene, PEEK) and a host of composite or alloyed materials. Fillers and other additives used in these materials improve mechanical, thermal and physical properties which in turn increase resistance to high pressures, temperatures, and corrosive attacks. Low-friction seal coatings like diamond-like carbon (DLC) and MoS.sub.2 are used in some compressor systems. For example, some sealing surfaces may be coated with DLC to provide low friction and long wear life in a reciprocating piston natural gas compressor.
[0028] Despite such incremental improvements, effective sealing of rotating or reciprocating surfaces of high performance compressors remains as a great challenge especially for long-life and high-pressure compressor applications such as much needed natural gas home-refueling units. DLC and other traditional sealing materials (like Teflon) tend to wear out due to inadequate performance characteristics (especially under high-compression, high speed and high temperature conditions) or limited thickness (i.e., DLC films are typically 1-3 m thick). For a long-lasting, high-performance, and cost-effective solution a coating that generates its own lubricious carbon film on rubbing or sealing surfaces from the natural gas being compressed is needed.
[0029] Diamond-like carbon films (DLC) have an unusual capacity to lower friction and wear when used as an overcoat on a surface. A nearly-frictionless version, i.e., nearly-frictionless carbon (NFC) provides friction and wear coefficients of 0.001-0.01 and 10.sup.10-510.sup.11 mm.sup.3/N.m, respectively, to sliding and/or rotating contact surfaces under dry sliding conditions of inert environments. The friction coefficient of Teflon under similar conditions is about 0.05 while those of steels or ceramics would have been more than 0.7. The dramatic reduction of friction by NFC is primarily due to the fact that the surface carbon atoms of these films are fully hydrogen terminated and hence there is little or no adhesive interactions to give rise to friction between the rubbing surfaces.
[0030] This invention provides a method of extracting carbon nano-structures (lubricious carbon films) from natural gas or hydrocarbon gas. A catalytically active nanocomposite coating can be coated on sliding surfaces of a mechanical system as illustrated in
[0031] The sliding surfaces of a mechanical system may be coated with the catalytically active material via sputtering each of the metallic constituents into a nitrogen rich plasma from V, Mo, Nb, W, Ni, Cu, Co targets in a physical deposition system to the predetermined thickness. In one embodiment the predetermined thickness may be approximately 3 nanometer to approximately 50 micrometer. In alternate embodiments the thickness may be a different thickness that produces acceptable results.
[0032] A deposition system forming the catalytic coatings on a work pieces generally includes a physical vapor deposition (PVD) apparatus which may be selected from several known processes including cathodic arc PVD, High Power Impulse Magnetron Sputtering (HIPIMS), ion plating, diode or triode Magnetron Sputtering (MS), pulse DC and the hybrids of all mentioned methods. In all of these processes, under the influence of high energy ions, electrons, and neutral atoms a very dense and highly adherent film or coating forms on the surfaces of substrates or work pieces to a desired thickness typically ranging from a few nanometer to up to 10 to 500 micrometers at deposition temperatures of room temperature (approximately 18 degrees Celsius) to approximately 500 degrees Celsius.
[0033] When a steel pin is rubbed against the catalytically active nano-composite coating in pure paraffinic (base mineral) or poly alpha-olefin (PAO, base synthetic) oils, a highly lubricious and durable carbon film with NFC-like structural chemistry is detected on rubbing surfaces as illustrated in
[0034] After the sliding surfaces are coated, the mechanical system is pressurized to a predetermined pressure. In one embodiment the pressure is approximately 3500 psi. Alternate embodiments may have predetermined pressures between atmospheric pressure (approximately 14.7 psi) to approximately 3500 psi. In yet further embodiments, the predetermined pressure may be greater than approximately 3500 psi. The temperature of the mechanical system is maintained in a predetermined range. The temperature may be maintained by an application specific apparatus or means. In one embodiment the predetermined range is approximately 18 C. to approximately 500 C. Alternate embodiments may have different predetermined temperature ranges such that acceptable results are obtained.
[0035] The mechanical system is filled with natural gas or hydrocarbon gas. The natural gas or hydrocarbon gas contains approximately 70-90 percent methane, approximately 0-20 percent ethane, approximately 0-8 percent carbon, approximately 0-0.2 percent oxygen, approximately 0-5 percent nitrogen and approximately 0-5 percent hydrogen sulphide. Under high-pressure compression when the mechanical system is operating, sealing faces of compressors/mechanical systems will be bombarded by the methane, ethane, propane, and butane molecules. In this environment the catalytically active nanocomposite coating will be able to derive similar NFC like boundary films from natural gas or hydrocarbon gas constituents and deposit them as highly durable, superlow friction boundary films on rubbing surfaces. Since lubricious carbon film is derived in-situ and on a self-replenishing/-repairing manner from the natural gas or hydrocarbon gas constituents, there will be no danger of wearing off (as is the case for most PVD or CVD deposited DLC and other low-friction films with finite thickness/life time). Obviously, such catalytically driven carbon films will also reduce frictional losses on seal faces (thus improving efficiency and reducing frictional heat build-up) and at the same time enable very tight sealing and much higher compression ratios through reduced leakage. This will be the ultimate solution for most sliding or reciprocating sealing faces of natural gas or hydrocarbon gas compressors.
[0036] To evaluate the coating, using a lab/industrial-scale magnetron sputtering systems in pulsed DC and high power impulse magnetron sputtering modes, MoNCu, VNCu, NbNNi, TaNNi nanocomposite coatings were deposited on 440C stainless steel test samples over a range of composition and film thickness. The metallic ingredients (i.e., Mo, V, Cu, Ni, Nb, Ag) of these coatings were selected strategically on the basis of their high catalytic activity toward hydrocarbons. Metal nitride phases in these films (accounting for 95-98 wt. % of total coating mass) provide high hardness for good wear resistance (beside their high catalytic activity), while the softer metals like Ni, Cu, and Ag (which was in the range of 2 to 5 wt. %) further aid in the catalytic cracking of methane in natural gas and help extract methane's carbon as lubricious films on sliding surfaces. All coatings produced exhibited Vickers hardness values of 20 to 35 GPa (depending on softer metal content) and their surface roughness was in the range of 20 to 50 nm. Using the magnetron sputtering system, VNCu, MoNCu, and NbNNi coatings were deposited on steel substrates.
[0037] Using a sealed vacuum tribometer under 900 torr methane gas pressure, the baseline (uncoated) 440C steel test samples were tested. This test system had a top-mounted ball holder which was pressed against a flat disk-shaped sample below under a contact pressure of about 0.5 GPa. As illustrated in
[0038] After establishing baseline performance of uncoated 440C, the friction and wear performance of 440C test samples coated with catalytically active nanocomposite coatings under the same test conditions were evaluated. Specifically, a number of tests with VNCu coated ball and disk pairs using the same test system. In this case, the performance was very different: wear damage on the ball side was virtually eliminated as illustrated in
[0039] In another test, the contact pressure was lowered to 0.3 GPa and the tests for surface chemical analyses rerun in order to understand the outstanding wear performance of VNCu coated test samples. As shown in a high-mag (200) image in
[0040] In additional tests the following was noted.
[0041] Some blackish wear debris particles or patches accumulated at or near the rubbing surfaces of both the ball and flat surfaces (highlighted with rectangles in
[0042] A transmission electron microscopy (TEM) examination of the microstructures and chemical bonding of the debris particles collected from the black region highlighted in by a square in
[0043] Based on these results, it is clear that VNNi coating is able to convert methane into graphene, nano-onion and disordered graphite all of which are known for their favorable anti-friction and -wear properties. Indeed, as was shown in
[0044] In short, lubricious carbon films was extracted from methane gas on rubbing surfaces. This coating can be used on rubbing steel surfaces of compressor systems, methane in natural gas will also act as a source for lubricant (beside being a fuel) and hence those mechanical components operating in such environments will be protected against wear in a continuous and self-healing/replenishing manner.
[0045] It is to be understood that the above-described arrangements are only illustrative of the application of the principles of the present invention. Numerous modifications and alternative arrangements may be devised by those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the present invention and the appended claims are intended to cover such modifications and arrangements.
[0046] All publications and patent documents cited in this application are incorporated by reference in their entirety for all purposes to the same extent as if each individual publication or patent document were so individually denoted.
[0047] Any element in a claim that does not explicitly state means for performing a specified function, or step for performing a specific function, is not to be interpreted as a means or step clause as specified in 35 U.S.C. 112, 6. In particular, the use of step of in the claims herein is not intended to invoke the provisions of 35 U.S.C. 112, 6.