CORROSION-RESISTANT SPRAYED COATING, METHOD FOR FORMING SAME AND SPRAYING DEVICE FOR FORMING SAME
20170015838 ยท 2017-01-19
Inventors
- RYUROU KURAHASHI (OSAKA, JP)
- TOSHIHARU MORIMOTO (OSAKA, JP)
- YOSHIO SHIN (OSAKA, JP)
- Fumiaki Otsubo (Fukuoka, JP)
- Yasuhiro Omori (Hyogo, JP)
- Takashi Kumai (Hyogo, JP)
- Yusuke Nishiura (Hyogo, JP)
- Toshifumi HOTTA (Hyogo, JP)
Cpc classification
B05B7/203
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B32B15/012
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
Abstract
[Problem] To provide a corrosion-resistant coating that exhibits greater corrosion protection in saltwater environments and the like than was conventional, a method for forming the same, and a device for forming the same.
[Solution] A corrosion-resistant alloy coating is formed on a substrate surface by: a) using a thermal spray gun, having a function wherein a flame including melted material particles is jetted toward a substrate, and the flame is partitioned from the open air in an upstream region on said jet path (which is to say the region in which the material particles are melted), and a function wherein, in a downstream region (the area continuing from the upstream region), the material particles and the flame are forcibly cooled by a jet-gas or jet-mist before reaching the substrate; and b) using a corrosion-resistant alloy material comprising aluminum, for the material particles.
Claims
1. A corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating, which is a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating covering a substrate surface, comprising aluminum, wherein, without laser irradiation or extrusion processing in addition to thermal spraying, and with the surface thereof unsealed, the porosity is 1% or less, and a microstructure is formed with a grain size of 10 m or less.
2. The corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating according to claim 1, comprising aluminum and comprising 0.3 to 15 mass % magnesium.
3. The corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating according to claim 1, comprising magnesium, silicon, manganese, titanium, copper and aluminum.
4. The corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating according to claim 1, wherein the content of oxygen is 0.2 mass % or less.
5. A corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating, which is a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating covering a substrate surface, comprising aluminum, wherein the porosity is 1% or less, with the surface thereof unsealed, and a microstructure is formed with a grain size of 10 m or less, and some of the microstructure includes a nanostructure with a submicron grain size.
6. The corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating according to claim 1, wherein the coating surface is sealed by covering with a silicone or epoxy resin.
7. A method for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating, wherein a corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating comprising aluminum that has a porosity of 1% or less, with the surface thereof unsealed, and that forms a microstructure with a grain size of 10 m or less, is formed on a substrate surface, using a thermal spray gun having a function wherein a flame including melted material particles is jetted toward a substrate, and the flame is partitioned from the open air in an upstream region on said jet path, and a function wherein, in a downstream region, the material particles and the flame are forcibly cooled by a jet-gas or jet-mist before reaching the substrate, and although thermal spraying is performed with a corrosion-resistant alloy material comprising aluminum as the material particles, neither laser irradiation nor extrusion processing are performed.
8. The method for forming a corrosion-resistant coating according to claim 7, wherein the corrosion-resistant alloy coating is formed on the surface of a substrate made from aluminum or an aluminum alloy.
9. The method for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 7, wherein the amount of oxygen supplied to the flame in the upstream region where the flame is partitioned from the open air is less than the amount of oxygen necessary for complete combustion.
10. The method for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 7, wherein a material comprising aluminum and comprising 0.3 to 15 mass % magnesium is used as the corrosion-resistant alloy material.
11. The method for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 7, wherein a material comprising magnesium, silicon, manganese, titanium, copper and aluminum is used as the corrosion-resistant alloy material.
12. The method for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 7, wherein the corrosion-resistant alloy material is supplied to the thermal spray gun in the form of a powder or a wire.
13. A device for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating, which is a flame-type thermal spraying device for forming a corrosion-resistant alloy coating comprising aluminum on a substrate surface, comprising a thermal spray gun having a function wherein a flame including melted material particles is jetted toward a substrate, and the flame is partitioned from the open air in an upstream region on said jet path, and a function wherein, in a downstream region, the material particles and the flame are forcibly cooled by a jet-gas or jet-mist before reaching the substrate, wherein the thermal spray gun has an inner cylinder and an outer cylinder, forming a conical gap there between, at the outer periphery thereof, and the jet-gas or jet-mist is supplied from an annular jet opening at the forward end of the gap, so as to produce a cylindrical flow, concentric with the jetted flame, gradually narrowing at an angle such as to intersect the centerline at a distance from the flame jet opening that is 3 to 7 times the diameter of the flame, and thereby a corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating comprising aluminum, which has a porosity of 1% or less with the surface thereof unsealed, and forms a microstructure with a grain size of 10 m or less, is formed on the substrate surface.
14. The device for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 13, wherein a jetted flame, a powder or a wire of a corrosion-resistant alloy material which comprises aluminum, and is to be melted by said flame, and a gas for cooling a tip-nozzle, are supplied from the center of the tip-nozzle, and the jet-gas or jet-mist is supplied from the outer periphery of said tip-nozzle, oriented toward the forward center.
15. The device for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 14, wherein nitrogen, which is the jet-gas, and the jet-mist, are supplied at 400 to 900 L per minute, in total, from the outer periphery of the tip-nozzle, oriented toward the forward center.
16. The device for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 15, wherein the amount of oxygen supplied to the flame in the upstream region where the flame is partitioned from the open air is less than the amount of oxygen necessary for complete combustion.
17. The device for forming a corrosion-resistant sprayed coating according to claim 16, wherein the melted material particles are cooled at a rate of 1,000,000 C. per second or more by the jet-gas or jet-mist.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF DRAWINGS
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DESCRIPTION OF EMBODIMENTS
[0066] Hereinafter, the present invention will be described in detail. A corrosion-resistant alloy sprayed coating is formed on a surface of a steel structure, steel plate or the like, by spraying with a coating formation device, which is a special thermal spray gun, using a material principally comprising AlMg.
[0067] The wire-type coating formation device 1 used is shown in
[0068] While omitted in the drawings, the wire-type flame spray gun 10 is connected to a material-wire supply pipe 11, in which the material-wire that will be thermally sprayed is supplied by way of a gas turbine (for example, using nitrogen), an acetylene supply pipe 12a that serves as fuel, an oxygen supply pipe 12b, and a supply pipe 13, for an internal cooling gas (for example nitrogen). A gas cap 14 is provided at the front end of the wire-type flame spray gun 10, from which, as shown in
[0069] Jet-gas (or jet-mist) for external cooling is supplied to the conical gap between the tip-nozzle inner cylinder 15 and the tip-nozzle outer cylinder 16, and is ejected from an annular jet opening at the front, in the direction of the forward centerline of the flame 17. Thus, the coating formation device 1, which includes the tip-nozzle outer cylinder 16 and the like, performs the characteristic functions of; a) supplying corrosion-resistant alloy material by wire; b) supplying the aforementioned jet-gas or jet-mist that cools the melted material particles and the flame so as to produce a gradually narrowing cylindrical flow from the outer periphery of the tip-nozzle, directed toward the forward (downstream) center; and c) supplying the jet-gas or jet-mist as an annular jet, concentric with the jetted flame (forming a circle that is concentric with the flame, at outside the flame, in a cross-sectional view) at an angle such as to intersect the centerline of the flame at a distance from the flame jet opening that is 3 to 7 times the diameter of the flame.
[0070] The tip-nozzle outer cylinder 16 shown in
[0071] When the wire-type coating formation device 1 in
[0072] In place of the coating formation device 1 shown in
[0073] The cylindrical member 21, serves to partition the flame from the open air, at the forward half of the flame that is jetted by the thermal spray gun 20, which is to say, in the melting region in which the powder material is melted, and to discharge a jet-mist or jet-gas from the forward end to the rear half (the forward part) of the flame. In this embodiment, a double cylindrical pipe made from stainless steel is used as the cylindrical member 21, in which an outer pipe 22 and an inner pipe 23 are arranged concentrically, with a gap between the two. A jet-mist or a jet-gas for providing external cooling of the flame and the molten material is supplied to this gap, and is ejected from the forward end 24. In this regard, if water is dripped from fine holes 22a that are provided in the outer pipe 22, a jet-mist will be formed by way of the nitrogen gas ejector effect, and the jet-mist will flow between the outer pipe 22 and the inner pipe 23 so as to be jetted from the forward end 24.
[0074] Using either the coating formation device 1 shown in
WORKING EXAMPLES
[0075] The sprayed coating is formed by way of the following procedure.
[0076] First, the surface of a steel plate (substrate) is blasted with alumina grit or steel grit. Next, an AlMg material is sprayed onto the surface of the substrate with the coating formation device 1 (wire type) or 2 (powder type). Specifically, the AlMg material is melted in a reducing atmosphere by adjusting the ratio of oxygen to acetylene, which is the combustion gas, and a jet-gas or jet-mist is caused to flow along the double nozzle so as to partition the melted material from the open air, so as to form a sprayed coating on the steel plate (substrate) at a cooling rate of approximately 1,000,000 C. per second or greater.
[0077] Note that, unless otherwise stated, the present invention is that wherein spraying is performed according to the conditions in Working Examples 1 to 3, and the prior art is that wherein spraying is performed according to the conditions in Comparative Examples 1 and 2. The conditions are shown in Table 1.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Working Working Working Comparative Comparative Example 1 Example 2 Example 3 Example 1 Example 2 Acetylene/oxygen 6:5 6:5 7:6 1:1 2:3 ratio Material supply Powder Wire type Powder Wire type Powder type method type type Thermal Al- Al- Al- Al- Al- spraying 5 mass % 5 mass % 5 mass % 5 mass % Mg 5 mass % Mg material Mg Mg Mg Internal cooling Nitrogen Nitrogen Nitrogen Air Air gas 70 L/min 900 L/min 70 L/min 900 L/min 70 L/min External cooling Nitrogen Nitrogen + Nitrogen + none none gas 400 L/min mist mist 900 L/min 680 L/min
[0078] The properties of the AlMg coating formed on the surface of the steel plate (substrate) as described above were found by way of the following tests.
[0079] 1. Combined Cycle Test
[0080] Plate corrosion resistance was evaluated for a steel plate on which the sprayed coatings were provided by performing an accelerated corrosion test in accordance with JASO M 609, 610, in which cycles were repeated consisting of: saline spraying (5% aqueous solution of NaCl/35 C./100% humidity/2 hours).fwdarw.drying (65 C./25% humidity/4 hours).fwdarw.wet (high temperature) (50 C./98% humidity/2 hours), so as to evaluate Working Example 1 and Comparative Example 1. The film thicknesses of the sprayed coating on the test pieces in these tests were 150 to 200 m. Note that the test described above was performed after making scratches, that reached the steel base, on the steel plate provided with the sprayed coating by using a cutter. The coatings after the test are shown in photographs in
[0081] 2) CASS Test (Copper Accelerated Acetic Acid Salt Spray Test)
[0082] The spray test was conducted over 48 hours, in accordance with JIS H 8502, in which a pH 3.0 test solution of 40 g/liter sodium chloride and 0.205 g/liter of copper(II) chloride was sprayed at an air saturator temperature of 63 C., and a test tank temperature of 50 C., at a spray rate of 2.0 mL/80 cm.sup.2/hour, and a compressed air pressure of 0.098 MPa. Working Example 1 and Comparative Example 1 were evaluated. In these tests, the film thicknesses of the test pieces were 250 to 300 m. Changes in the surface conditions such as discoloration, stains, corrosion, surface degradation, peeling and the like, and changes in the weight of the test pieces after the tests are shown in the following Table 2. An Al(OH).sub.3 corrosion product was formed as a result of an aluminum dissolution reaction and weight was lost as a result of the gel-like Al(OH).sub.3 running off.
TABLE-US-00002 TABLE 2 Working Example 1 Comparative Example 1 Coating AlMg AlMg type Surface Good Discoloration condition Weight 1.7% 9.6% change
[0083] 3) Elemental Analysis Tests
[0084] The results of analysis produced by ICP emission spectrography and inert gas fusion are shown in Table 3. As per Table 3, there was no difference in the ratio of oxygen in the sprayed materials in Working Example 1 and Comparative Example 1, but in the sprayed coatings, the oxygen content in Working Example 1 was less than 0.2 mass %, while in Comparative Example 1 the oxygen content was more than 0.2 mass %. Accordingly, it can be said that oxidization of aluminum and magnesium is better prevented in Working Example 1 than in Comparative Example 1.
TABLE-US-00003 TABLE 3 (mass %) Thermal spraying material Sprayed Coating Al Mg O Al Mg O Working 94.86 5.14 <0.00* 93.3 3.75 0.17 Example 1 Comparative 94.66 5.34 <0.00* 94.4 4.58 0.24 Example 1 *Below measurement limit
[0085] 4) Electrochemical Measurement Tests
[0086] Polarization measurements were performed for the coatings in Working Example 1 and Comparative Example 1, and the results are shown in
[0087] 5) SEM Images
[0088] SEM observation was performed for Working Examples 1 to 3 and Comparative Example 1, and the SEM images are shown in
[0089] Note that a ferroxyl test was performed on Working Example 1, in accordance with JIS K 8617, in which pure water was added to 10 g of potassium hexacyanoferrate trihydrate, 10 g of potassium hexacyanoferrate and 60 g of sodium chloride, and this was brought to 1000 ml. Defects reaching the substrate can be observed as blue spots, but there were no spots in Working Example 1. The results of the ferroxyl test for Working Example 1 are shown in
[0090] 6) EBSP Analysis
[0091] EBSP (electron back scattering pattern) analysis was performed for the coatings in Working Example 1 and Comparative Example 2, and the results are shown in
[0092] When spraying is performed using the coating formation device 1 or 2 in
[0093] Here, with aluminum as a substrate, a sprayed coating was formed on the surface of said substrate using the same conditions as in Working Example 1. The cross-section thereof taken with a metallurgic microscope is shown in