GRADED INTERLAYER
20240189904 ยท 2024-06-13
Inventors
Cpc classification
B33Y10/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/04
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2007/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B33Y80/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F12/41
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/14
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2005/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02E30/10
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
B22F10/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2007/042
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/115
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2007/045
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2005/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F7/064
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/28
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2998/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F10/25
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F3/105
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2999/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B22F2007/042
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Y02P10/25
GENERAL TAGGING OF NEW TECHNOLOGICAL DEVELOPMENTS; GENERAL TAGGING OF CROSS-SECTIONAL TECHNOLOGIES SPANNING OVER SEVERAL SECTIONS OF THE IPC; TECHNICAL SUBJECTS COVERED BY FORMER USPC CROSS-REFERENCE ART COLLECTIONS [XRACs] AND DIGESTS
International classification
Abstract
A method of joining first and second materials. The first material is a metal, a ceramic, or a composite material comprising carbon fibre, and the second material is a metal. The first material has a coefficient of thermal expansion, CTE, which is higher than a CTE of the second material. An interlayer is formed, having a high thermal expansion surface and a low thermal expansion surface. The CTE of the interlayer varies through its depth between the CTE of the first material and the CTE of the second material. The interlayer has four average coefficients of thermal expansion, aCTE, defined such that each aCTE is the average coefficient of thermal expansion over one quarter of the thickness of the interlayer. Each aCTE is less than the previous aCTE, where the first aCTE is next to the high thermal expansion surface. Either: the difference between the first and second aCTE is greater than the difference between the second and third aCTE, and the difference between the second and third aCTE is greater than the difference between the third and fourth aCTE; or the difference between the second and third aCTE is greater than both the difference between the first and second aCTE and the difference between the third and fourth aCTE.
Claims
1. A method of joining first and second materials, wherein the first material is a metal, a ceramic, or a composite material comprising carbon fibre, and the second material is a metal wherein the first material has a coefficient of thermal expansion, CTE, which is higher than a CTE of the second material, the method comprising: forming an interlayer having a CTE which varies through the interlayer, and having a high thermal expansion surface and a low thermal expansion surface; bonding the first material to the high thermal expansion surface of the interlayer, and the second material to the low thermal expansion surface of the interlayer; wherein: the CTE of the interlayer varies through its depth between the CTE of the first material and the CTE of the second material; the interlayer has first, second, third, and fourth average coefficients of thermal expansion, aCTE, defined such that each aCTE is the average coefficient of thermal expansion over one quarter of the thickness of the interlayer; the first aCTE is defined from the high thermal expansion surface and is less than the CTE of the first material; the second aCTE is defined from the midpoint of the thickness of the interlayer towards the high thermal expansion surface and is less than the first aCTE; the third aCTE is defined from the midpoint of the interlayer towards the low thermal expansion surface and is less than the second aCTE; the fourth aCTE is defined from the low thermal expansion surface and is less than the third aCTE and greater than the CTE of the second material; wherein either: the difference between the first and second aCTE is greater than the difference between the second and third aCTE, and the difference between the second and third aCTE is greater than the difference between the third and fourth aCTE; wherein the average CTE of a region of the interlayer means the weighted average of the CTE of each material in the interlayer, weighted by the volume fraction of the material in that region.
2. A method according to claim 1, wherein the interlayer is a composite material comprising a first interlayer material and a second interlayer material, the first interlayer material having a coefficient of thermal expansion at least equal to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the first material, and the second interlayer material having a coefficient of thermal expansion at most equal to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the second material.
3. A method according to claim 2, wherein the first interlayer material is the first material, and the second interlayer material is the second material.
4. A method according to claim 2, wherein forming the interlayer comprises powder sintering powders of the first and second interlayer material, wherein the interlayer coefficient of thermal expansion is dependent on the ratio of the amount of powder of the first interlayer material to the amount of powder of the second interlayer material.
5. A method according to claim 2, wherein forming the interlayer comprises: providing a plurality of laminates of each of the first and second interlayer material; bonding the laminates so as to form alternating layers of each of the first and second interlayer materials, each layer being parallel to the interlayer; wherein the coefficient of thermal expansion at a given depth into the interlayer is dependent on the thickness of the layers of each interlayer material at that depth.
6. A method according to claim 2, wherein: the interlayer comprises a first element made from the first interlayer material and a second element made from the second interlayer material; the elements interlock such that the proportion of each interlayer material in a cross section of the interlayer varies with depth through the interlayer; the coefficient of thermal expansion at a given depth is dependent on the proportion of each interlayer material in a cross section at that depth.
7. A method according to claim 1, wherein bonding the first and second material to the interlayer comprises hot isostatic pressing, diffusion bonding, and/or field assisted sintering.
8. A method according to claim 1, wherein, for any number N, the interlayer has an average coefficient of thermal expansion aCTE for N regions defined along the thickness of the interlayer, and the aCTE for each region varies as a polynomial function of the depth of the region through the interlayer.
9. An interlayer for joining a first material and a second material, wherein the first material is a metal, a ceramic, or a composite material comprising carbon fibre, and the second material is a metal, the interlayer having a coefficient of thermal expansion, CTE, which varies through the interlayer, and having a high thermal expansion surface and a low thermal expansion surface, wherein: the interlayer has first, second, third, and fourth average coefficients of thermal expansion, aCTE, defined such that each aCTE is the average coefficient of thermal expansion over one quarter of the thickness of the interlayer; the first aCTE is defined from the high thermal expansion surface; the second aCTE is defined from the midpoint of the thickness of the interlayer towards the high thermal expansion surface and is less than the first aCTE; the third aCTE is defined from the midpoint of the interlayer towards the low thermal expansion surface and is less than the second aCTE; the fourth aCTE is defined from the low thermal expansion surface and is less than the third aCTE; wherein either: the difference between the first and second aCTE is greater than the difference between the second and third aCTE, and the difference between the second and third aCTE is greater than the difference between the third and fourth aCTE; wherein the average CTE of a region of the interlayer means the weighted average of the CTE of each material in the interlayer, weighted by the volume fraction of the material in that region.
10. An interlayer according to claim 9, wherein the interlayer is a composite material comprising a first interlayer material and a second interlayer material, the first interlayer material having a coefficient of thermal expansion at least equal to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the first material, and the second interlayer material having a coefficient of thermal expansion at most equal to the coefficient of thermal expansion of the second material.
11. An interlayer according to claim 10, wherein forming the interlayer comprises powder sintering powders of the first and second interlayer material; wherein the interlayer coefficient of thermal expansion is dependent on the ratio of the amount of powder of the first interlayer material to the amount of powder of the second interlayer material.
12. An interlayer according to claim 10, wherein the interlayer comprises alternating layers, each consisting of one of the first and second interlayer materials, each layer being parallel to the interlayer.
13. An interlayer according to claim 10, wherein: the interlayer comprises a first element made from the first interlayer material and a second element made from the second interlayer material; the elements interlock such that the proportion of each interlayer material in a cross section of the interlayer varies with depth through the interlayer; the coefficient of thermal expansion at a given depth is dependent on the proportion of each interlayer material in a cross section at that depth.
14. An interlayer according to claim 10, wherein the first interlayer material is the first material and the second interlayer material is the second material.
15. An interlayer according to claim 10, for any number N, the interlayer has an average coefficient of thermal expansion aCTE for N regions defined along the thickness of the interlayer, and the aCTE for each region varies as a polynomial function of the depth of the region through the interlayer.
16. An apparatus comprising: a first component formed from a first material having a first coefficient of thermal expansion, wherein the first material is a metal, a ceramic, or a composite material comprising carbon fibre; a second component formed from a second material having a second coefficient of thermal expansion which is lower than the first coefficient of thermal expansion, wherein the second material is a metal; and an interlayer according to claim 10, wherein the first component is bonded to the high thermal expansion surface of the interlayer, and the second component is bonded to the low thermal expansion surface of the interlayer; wherein the coefficient of thermal expansion of the interlayer has a value between the first and second coefficients of thermal expansion throughout the interlayer.
17. An apparatus according to claim 16, wherein the apparatus is a divertor or first wall surface for a tokamak plasma chamber, the divertor or first wall surface comprising a plasma facing surface and a cooling arrangement, the cooling arrangement comprising a heatsink, wherein the first component is the plasma facing surface, and the second component is the heatsink.
18. An apparatus according to claim 17, wherein the first material is a refractory metal having a melting point of at least 1850? C. or an alloy primarily composed of a refractory metal, and the second material is copper or an alloy primarily composed of copper.
19. An apparatus according to claim 18 wherein the refractory metal has a melting point of at least 2000? C.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0026] Previous graded interlayers have either had a linear or stepped profilei.e with the thermal expansion coefficient of each the interlayer either changing linearly through the interlayer, or in large discrete steps across the interlayer. Instead, this document proposes more complex grading profiles which provide improved resistance to strain caused by thermal expansion.
[0027] One way to achieve a material having a coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) intermediate between a high thermal expansion material and a low thermal expansion material is to provide a composite material formed from both materials, with the proportion of each material determining the bulk thermal expansion coefficient. Example composite types will be described later.
[0028]
[0029] The linear interlayer 210 has a thermal expansion coefficient which decreases linearly with distance across the interlayer. While this is shown as a continuous decrease, it may be the result of e.g. a laminated composite with differing proportions of high thermal expansion and low thermal expansion layers in the different regions, with the value plotted on the graph being the effective bulk thermal expansion coefficient over a small distance.
[0030] The stepped interlayer 220 has a thermal expansion coefficient which decreases in a stepwise fashion with distance across the interlayer, with a linear decrease between each step.
[0031]
[0032] The second exemplary interlayer 320 follows a function such that the slope of the function approaches zero monotonically towards the low thermal expansion material, i.e. the magnitude of the slope is always steady or decreasing as the function moves towards the low thermal expansion material. This results in the steepest changes in thermal expansion coefficient being adjacent to the high thermal expansion material, which provides favourable performance as the high thermal expansion material and the interlayer at that interface will generally be more ductile and compliant than the low thermal expansion material and the interlayer at the corresponding interface, and therefore able to accommodate higher stresses without failure.
[0033] One example function for the second exemplary interlayer would be a polynomial function of the form ?=?.sub.k=0.sup.na.sub.kd.sup.k, where ? is the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) (averaged over a small thickness, in the case of composite materials), d is the depth through the interlayer (i.e. the distance from one of the materials being joined), and a.sub.k are numerical coefficients. By selection of the coefficients a.sub.k, a profile can be determined such that slope of the resulting function approaches zero monotonically at least within the range of the interlayer (0<d<1, as defined previously). For example the interlayer may follow a square function (where n=2) or a cubic function (where n=3).
[0034] While the exemplary interlayers shown in
[0035] Similar to the difference between the linear interlayer and stepped interlayer in
[0036] For an approximation to the sigmoid interlayer, the difference in average CTE for adjacent steps closer to the edge of the interlayer (i.e. closer to the high or low thermal expansion surfaces) will be less than the difference in average CTE for adjacent steps towards the midpoint of the interlayer.
[0037] For an approximation to the second exemplary interlayer, the difference in average CTE for adjacent steps will be greater the closer those steps are to the high thermal expansion surface.
[0038] While the above is described in terms of an interlayer constructed in discrete steps, it also applies to other constructions of an interlayer. As a first example, an interlayer which perfectly follows the functions shown in
[0039] The particular case of N=4 is shown in
[0040] The N=4 case will hold for any interlayer sufficiently different from the linear interlayers of the prior art to show the desired improvements. The advantage will increase for interlayers that obey closer approximations to the smooth functions discussed above, but this will be a trade off with cost and ease of manufacture.
[0041] The interlayer may be manufactured in various ways, with the variation in the CTE being produced by alloying, powder grading, laminate grading, structural grading, or providing other composite material structures.
[0042] Powder grading involves providing two or more materials in powder form, and varying the volume fraction of these materials through the interlayer to produce the required variation in CTE. For example, the first powder may be the low thermal expansion material, and the second powder may be the second thermal expansion material. These powders are then mixed and sintered or otherwise bonded together, while controlling the volume fraction of each powder during the bonding, to provide a bulk CTE which varies in the required way. For example,
[0043] A graded interlayer may also be provided as shown in
[0044] A further example is a structurally graded interlayer 700 as shown in
sin x cos y+sin y cos z+sin z cos x=0
and the Schwarz D structure has a surface defined by the equation
sin x sin y sin z+sin x cos y cos z+cos x sin y cos z+cos x cos y sin z=0
[0045] These and related surfaces may be used with appropriate adjustments to provide the required grading.
[0046] In the example shown in
[0047] Other manufacturing techniques which are suitable for forming a section of the structurally graded interlayer include: [0048] Additive manufacturing techniques such as: [0049] Laser powder bed fusion [0050] Electron beam powder bed fusion [0051] Powder bed binder jetting, in which a powder is bound by polymers to create the required shape, and then the polymers are removed and the powders are sintered to bulk. [0052] Direct energy deposition, i.e. the impingement of material into a melt pool which is then moved to form an additive layer. [0053] Laser micromachining, i.e. the ablative removal of material from a surface by a laser [0054] Laser or electron beam surface texturing, i.e. the use of a laser or electron beam to ablate material and to provide controlled melting and solidification to manipulate surface properties [0055] Conventional machining [0056] Electro-discharge machining, i.e. the erosion of the surface by controlled electrical discharges.
[0057] Where the material of the section would form surface oxides, these may be controlled during formation or subsequently removed to ensure a good bond to the other section.
[0058] Where the section is created via additive manufacturing, it may be printed directly onto the low thermal expansion material or the high thermal expansion material, as appropriate (i.e. on the material matching the material of the section).
[0059] The other section of a structurally graded interlayer may be backfilled into the first manufactured section as a powder (which can then be formed into a bulk by sintering, HIP (Hot Isostatic Pressing), FAST (Field Assisted Sintering Technique) pressing, or other suitable technique), or as a molten metal (i.e. casting). To improve bonding between the two sections, a thin layer of the material of the second section may be provided on the first section, e.g. by providing a foil of the material of the second section, or by a deposition technique such as plasma spraying or chemical vapour deposition. Where an additive manufacturing technique is used to create one section, the other section may be simultaneously created as part of the additive manufacturing technique, where such technique allows the use of two different materials.
[0060] For any of the interlayer constructions above, or any other interlayer which may be envisioned, the interlayer may be bonded to the high and low thermal expansion materials to be joined by the use any suitable process. For example a sintering process may be used, such as vacuum sintering, uniaxial pressure assisted sintering (i.e. hot pressing), current assisted sintering (e.g. field assisted sintering, spark plasma sintering, or pulsed electric current sintering), or hot isostatic pressing (HIP).
[0061] As a simplified description of the HIP process, with reference to
[0074] Particularly where the high thermal expansion material is copper and the low thermal expansion material is tungsten, and the interlayer is also formed from these materials, it may be beneficial to provide surface treatments to the low thermal expansion material layer prior to forming the interlayer, or to low thermal expansion material components of the interlayer prior to bonding them to high thermal expansion material components. For example, in the case where the high thermal expansion material is tungsten, it will form an oxide layer which may interfere with bonding if not removed prior to the bonding process. Additionally, when powder processes are used to deposit the interlayer onto a tungsten bulk, bonding between the tungsten and the copper of the interlayer may be improved if an initial layer of copper is provided on the tungsten by some other process (e.g. brazing of a copper foil, or physical vapour deposition of copper).
[0075] As noted previously, this interlayer design is of particular use in a fusion reactor, for both the divertor and the first wall, due to the extreme temperature differences that can be experienced by those components.
[0076] An exemplary divertor is shown schematically in
[0077] An exemplary first wall tile is shown in
[0078] As an alternative approach to the use of a refractory metal for the first wall surface, the first wall surface may be formed from a metal with a low atomic number, e.g. beryllium. While such a metal will not have the plasma resistance of a refractory metal, any atoms of the metal which do enter the plasma will have minimal effect due to the low atomic number.
[0079] It will be appreciated that where coefficient of thermal expansion is used above, this may be the linear, area, or volumetric coefficient of thermal expansion. In the event that the linear or area coefficient of thermal expansion is used and the material under consideration is not isotropic, the relevant linear direction or plane for the area is locally parallel to the join between the interlayer and each material.
[0080] Where particular metals are referred to above, alloys primarily composed of those metals may also be used.
[0081] While the particular example of a refractory metal joined to copper has been used in several places above, it will be appreciated that the interlayer may be used to join other materials. For example, the materials to be joined may both be metals. The low thermal expansion material may be a ceramic or a composite containing carbon fibre. The high thermal expansion material will generally be a metal, particularly for high heat flux applications where this material is used as a heatsink for a cooler.