COATED BALLISTIC STRUCTURES
20170016701 ยท 2017-01-19
Assignee
Inventors
- Robert M. Willson (Kettering, OH, US)
- Michael C. Willson (Troy, OH, US)
- Anil R. (Neil) Chaudhry (Xenia, OH, US)
Cpc classification
Y10T428/12535
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
Y10T428/26
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
F41H5/0414
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41H5/0492
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
F41H5/0442
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
Y10T428/12576
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
Armor components having a ceramic substrate, a thermal sprayed barrier coating covering the substrate material to form a barrier coated substrate, and an outermost encapsulation of metal generally surrounding at least the periphery of the barrier coated substrate are disclosed herein. The encapsulation of metal was cast to the ceramic substrate as molten metal, and the thermal sprayed barrier coating comprises a cermet material, a ceramic material, or a combination thereof. The ceramic substrate is preferably a ceramic tile for ballistic armor. Also disclosed are armor components having a plurality of the ceramic tiles interconnected by the encapsulation of metal, with the metal, which was casted thereto, surrounding at least the periphery of each of the plurality of the armor components.
Claims
1. An armor component comprising: a ceramic substrate having a first coefficient of thermal expansion; a thermal sprayed barrier coating covering the substrate material to form a barrier coated substrate; and an outermost encapsulation of metal generally surrounding at least the periphery of the barrier coated substrate; wherein the encapsulation of metal was casted thereon as molten metal having a second coefficient of thermal expansion; wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating comprises: a first coating applied to the ceramic substrate and comprising a cermet material, a ceramic material, or a combination thereof having a coefficient of thermal expansion most closely matching the first coefficient of thermal expansion; and a second coating over the first coating, the second coating comprising a metallic material and having a coefficient of thermal expansion most closely matching the second coefficient of thermal expansion.
2. The armor component of claim 1, wherein the ceramic substrate includes one or more of aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, boron carbide, titanium diboride, aluminum nitride, silicon nitride, or tungsten carbide.
3. The armor component of claim 1, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating is a plasma-sprayed barrier coating.
4. The armor component of claim 1, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating has a coating thickness of about 0.001 to about 0.125 inches.
5. The armor component of claim 1, wherein the ceramic or cermet materials in the first coating are selected from the group consisting of aluminum oxide, magnesium aluminate spinel, zirconium oxide, and combinations thereof.
6. The armor component of claim 1, wherein the ceramic substrate comprises a ceramic tile for ballistic armor.
7. The armor component of claim 1, comprising a plurality of the armor components interconnected by the encapsulation of metal; wherein the metal surrounds at least the periphery of each of the plurality of the armor components.
8. An armor component comprising: a ceramic substrate having a first coefficient of thermal expansion; a thermal sprayed barrier coating covering the substrate material to form a barrier coated substrate; and an outermost encapsulation of metal generally surrounding at least the periphery of the barrier coated substrate; wherein the encapsulation of metal was casted thereon as molten metal having a second coefficient of thermal expansion; wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating is a functionally graded coating having an exposed surface comprising a coefficient of thermal expansion more closely matching the coefficient of thermal expansion of the molten metal and an interior surface against the ceramic substrate that has a coefficient of thermal expansion more closely matching the coefficient of thermal expansion of the ceramic substrate.
9. The armor component of claim 8, wherein the ceramic substrate includes one or more of aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, boron carbide, titanium diboride, aluminum nitride, silicon nitride, or tungsten carbide.
10. The armor component of claim 8, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating is a plasma-sprayed barrier coating.
11. The armor component of claim 8, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating has a coating thickness of about 0.001 to about 0.125 inches.
12. The armor component of claim 8, wherein the interior surface of the thermal sprayed barrier coating comprises as a majority thereof a ceramic material, a cermet material, or a combination thereof selected from the group consisting of aluminum oxide, magnesium aluminate spinel, zirconium oxide, and combinations thereof.
13. The armor component of claim 8, wherein the ceramic substrate comprises a ceramic tile for ballistic armor.
14. The armor component of claim 8, comprising a plurality of the armor components interconnected by the encapsulation of metal; wherein the metal surrounds at least the periphery of each of the plurality of the armor components.
15. An armor component comprising: a ceramic substrate; a thermal sprayed barrier coating covering the substrate material to form a barrier coated substrate; and an outermost encapsulation of metal generally surrounding at least the periphery of the barrier coated substrate; wherein the encapsulation of metal was casted thereon as molten metal; wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating comprises a cermet material, a ceramic material, or a combination thereof.
16. The armor component of claim 15, wherein the ceramic substrate includes one or more of aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, boron carbide, titanium diboride, aluminum nitride, silicon nitride, or tungsten carbide.
17. The armor component of claim 15, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating is a plasma-sprayed barrier coating.
18. The armor component of claim 15, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating has a coating thickness of about 0.001 to about 0.125 inches.
19. The armor component of claim 15, wherein the thermal sprayed barrier coating is a functionally graded coating having an exposed surface comprising a first coefficient of thermal expansion more closely matching the coefficient of thermal expansion of the molten metal and an interior surface against the ceramic substrate that has a second coefficient of thermal expansion more closely matching the coefficient of thermal expansion of the ceramic substrate.
20. The armor component of claim 19, wherein the exposed surface comprises a metallic bond coat applied to the thermal sprayed barrier coating that has the first coefficient of thermal expansion.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0019] The following detailed description will illustrate the general principles of the invention, examples of which are additionally illustrated in the accompanying drawings. In the drawings, like reference numbers indicate identical or functionally similar elements.
[0020] Armor components disclosed herein provide the ability for ceramic tiles to be successfully encapsulated in metal via a casting process utilizing molten metal to form an armor member. The armor member and the method of making the same do not chemically degrade or crack the ceramic tiles or the surrounding steel. The armor components comprise a ceramic substrate or other similar hard substrate suitable for ballistic and/or armor applications coated with a material that protects the underlying ceramic tile from chemical and thermal interactions with the molten metal during the casting process. The coating on the tiles also minimizes stresses, coating spallation, and delamination caused by the molten metal and/or by the solidifying metal (including the change in stresses when the metal changes from molten to solid).
[0021] One challenge is to cast the molten metal (for example, steel) around the tile without cracking the tile. The mismatch in the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of the tile relative to the metal causes relatively high thermal loading and strain in both the tile and the surrounding metal, which may both crack. To adequately address the CTE mismatch, reduce processing risk, and improve the ballistic performance, a coating, in particular a thermal sprayed coating such as a plasma sprayed coating, a flamed coating, or any variation of a thermal coating, is applied to the tile. In one embodiment, the coating is applied to a SiC or Al.sub.2O.sub.3 ceramic tile, which is then cast into a steel matrix.
[0022]
[0023] As seen in
[0024] The core of the armor component 10, as mentioned above, is preferably a tile 12 or plate of or including a ceramic material selected from the group consisting of aluminum oxide, silicon carbide, boron carbide, titanium diboride, aluminum nitride, silicon nitride and tungsten carbide. Tile 12 may also be made of any hard, high compressive strength material having a Vickers hardness of about 12 GPa or greater and a compressive strength of about 2 GPa or greater.
[0025] The material for the coating 14 may be, but is not limited to, a plasma-sprayable ceramic or cermet material such as aluminum oxide, magnesium aluminate spinel, zirconium oxide, other oxides, and combinations thereof. Cermet means a material comprising a metal or a metal alloy and a ceramic powder or a mixture of ceramic powders. Cermet is fabricated from the ceramic powder selected from a group of compounds represented and exemplified by the titanium-aluminum oxide system. Other systems, such as and including zirconium, hafnium, beryllium, vanadium oxides, nitrates, silicates or borides, etc., in combination with a metal, such as titanium, aluminum, magnesium, nickel, lithium, calcium, or their alloys are equally suitable for fabrication of cermets of the invention. In addition to these named systems, any other suitable alloy system meeting the general conditions for processing of the cermets may also be advantageously used to fabricate these cermets using the molten-metal-infiltration method and process and are intended to be within the scope of the invention. In one embodiment, the cermet may be a mixture of a ceramic, such as for example, aluminum oxide, zirconium oxide, hafnium oxide, beryllium oxide, vanadium oxide, boron carbide, aluminum nitride, zirconium nitride, hafnium nitride, vanadium nitride, aluminum boride, zirconium boride, hafnium boride, vanadium boride, aluminum silicate, zirconium silicate, hafnium silicate, vanadium silicate powders or their mixtures, in combination with a metal such as titanium, aluminum, magnesium, nickel, lithium, calcium, or other suitable metals, or their alloys, etc.
[0026] These materials may be provided as a powder for use in plasma spraying. The powder may have an average particle size of about 5 m to about 120 m, preferably about 10 m to about 50 m.
[0027] The coating 14, which forms a layer on the tile 12 as illustrated in
[0028] In one embodiment, the coating 14 may be a functionally graded coating applied to tile 12 where the surface coating CTE will match that of the tile surface and functionally change as one moves further from the tile surface. The outer or exposed part of the coating will ultimately match the surrounding metal matrix CTE (metal that is poured to encapsulate the tiles). When the metal is investment cast around the tiles and begins to solidify, the stresses will be reduced on the metal matrix and the tile surface as the CTE mismatch is minimized. An important feature of these coatings is their ability to form a barrier layer between the tile and the molten metal to eliminate degradation of the tiles whether chemical or mechanical.
[0029] As shown in
[0030] The optional metallic bond coating 19 may be a metal or metal alloy layer applied to coating 14. The metal or metal alloy may be a powder for thermal spray applications such that the bond coat may be provided as a plasma spray coating. The metallic bond coating 19 may be applied at a thickness of about 0.002 to about 0.004 inches. In one embodiment, the metallic bond coating 19 is about 0.003 inches thick. The metal or metal alloy may be a powder, for example, but not limited to, an aluminum, cobalt, copper, iron, molybdenum, nickel metal or metal alloys.
[0031] Referring now to
[0032] In another embodiment, the photograph of
[0033] One method of encapsulating one or more tiles 12 in molten metal is an investment casting technology called foam pattern technology (FOPAT). Foam pattern casting is advantageous over the lost-wax method for casting an array of armor components because it is more rigid and dimensionally more stable. FOPAT uses various polymers in combination with a modified reaction injection molding process and alternate tooling methods to produce investment casting patterns. The reaction injection molding is a polymer fabrication technique involving the extremely rapid impingement mixing of two chemically reactive liquid streams that are injected into a mold, resulting in simultaneous polymerization, cross-linking, and formation of the desired shape.
[0034] Thereafter, the foam pattern 54 is invested in a mold, as in conventional investment mold production, for example, as shown in
[0035] This process does not require a pattern removal step and eliminates the need for an autoclave, which is used to melt and remove wax patterns. Instead, the foam material portion of the foam pattern is burned out during the firing of the ceramic shell 56. Foam pattern technology, with its stronger patterns and unique flow characteristics, is ideal for thin and complex sections. Other benefits of the foam pattern technology include essentially no pattern shrinkage (i.e., stable pattern yield with no shell cracking defects), stronger patterns (enable insertion of the ceramic tiles without pattern defects), stiffer patterns (improves handling, which avoids creep issue experiences with wax molds), pattern storage and shipment without damage or distortion, cost savings (potentially 30% cheaper per pattern), minimal heating required (foam reaction occurs at room temperature), and reduced cost of injection tooling since the foam is injected at lower pressures than wax.
[0036] In an alternate method, the foam pattern 54 may be suspended in a vessel that is filled with compacted sand, which is then heated to evaporate the foam material. Thereafter, molten metal may be poured into the vacancies left by the evaporated foam material to form an armor member.