COLD SPRAY LOW-FRICTION SOLID LUBRICANT COATING
20250297182 ยท 2025-09-25
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
International classification
Abstract
A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating includes an alloy feedstock consisting of a metal powder such as copper or nickel, and a solid lubricant, such as tungsten disulfide (WS.sub.2) powder or molybdenum disulfide (MoS.sub.2).
Claims
1. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the lubricant comprising: a mixture of: a copper powder with a concentration equal to or greater than 0% by weight of the mixture; and a tungsten disulfide (WS.sub.2) powder with a concentration between about 10% and 100% by weight of the mixture.
2. The cold spray lubricant of claim 1, wherein the copper powder has a particle size of about 1 m.
3. The cold spray lubricant of claim 1, wherein the tungsten disulfide has a particle size of about 24 m.
4. The cold spray lubricant of claim 1, wherein the coating is produced with a 20-40% powder feed rate at a temperature of about 425 C.
5. The cold spray lubricant of claim 4, wherein the coating has a coefficient of friction between about 0.01 and 0.03 for 14000 cycles of an endurance test.
6. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the lubricant consisting of pure tungsten disulfide (WS.sub.2) powder.
7. The cold spray lubricant of claim 6, wherein the coating is produced with a 25-100% powder feed rate tungsten disulfide (WS.sub.2) at a temperature of about 425 C.
8. The cold spray lubricant of claim 7, wherein the coating has a coefficient of friction of about 0.02 for 6000 cycles of an endurance test.
9. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the lubricant consisting of pure molybdenum disulfide (MoS.sub.2) powder.
10. The cold spray lubricant of claim 9, wherein the coating is produced with a 25% powder feed rate of molybdenum disulfide (MoS.sub.2) at a temperature of about 370 C.
11. The cold spray lubricant of claim 9, wherein the coating has a coefficient of friction of about 0.02-0.03 for 6000 cycles of an endurance test.
12. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the lubricant comprising: a mixture of: a nickel powder with a concentration equal to or greater than 0% by weight of the mixture; and a molybdenum disulfide (MoS.sub.2) powder with a concentration between about 10% and 100% by weight of the mixture.
13. The cold spray lubricant of claim 12, wherein the nickel powder has a particle size of about 1-5 m.
14. The cold spray lubricant of claim 12, wherein the molybdenum disulfide has a particle size of about 15 m.
15. The cold spray lubricant of claim 12, wherein the coating is produced with a powder feed rate of about 25% at a temperature of about 370 C.
16. The cold spray lubricant of claim 15, wherein the coating has a coefficient of friction of about 0.02 to 0.03 for 9000 cycles of an endurance test.
17. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the lubricant comprising: a mixture of: a nickel powder with a concentration equal to or greater than 0% by weight of the mixture; and a tungsten disulfide (WS.sub.2) powder with a concentration between about 10% and 100% by weight of the mixture.
18. The cold spray lubricant of claim 17, wherein the nickel powder has a particle size of about 1-5 m.
19. The cold spray lubricant of claim 17, wherein the tungsten disulfide has a particle size of about 100 nm.
20. The cold spray lubricant of claim 17, wherein the coating is produced with a powder feed rate of about 40% at a temperature of about 370 C.
21. The cold spray lubricant of claim 20, wherein the coating has a coefficient of friction of about 0.01 for 10000 cycles of an endurance test.
22. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the cold spray lubricant comprising: an alloy feedstock consisting of: a metal powder; and a solid lubricant.
23. A cold spray lubricant for forming a coating, the cold spray lubricant comprising: an alloy feedstock consisting of: a copper powder; and a solid molybdenum disulfide (MoS.sub.2) powder with a concentration between about 10% and 100% by weight.
24. The cold spray lubricant of claim 23, wherein the copper powder has a particle size of about 1 m.
25. The cold spray lubricant of claim 23, wherein the molybdenum disulfide has a particle size of about 15 m.
26. The cold spray lubricant of claim 23, wherein the coating is produced with a 15-25% powder feed rate at a temperature of about 370 C.
27. The cold spray lubricant of claim 26, wherein the coating has a coefficient of friction between about 0.01 and 0.02 for 17000 cycles of an endurance test.
Description
DRAWINGS
[0018] In order that the disclosure may be well understood, there will now be described various forms thereof, given by way of example, reference being made to the accompanying drawings, in which:
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[0034] The drawings described herein are for illustration purposes only and are not intended to limit the scope of the present disclosure in any way.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0035] The following description is merely exemplary in nature and is not intended to limit the present disclosure, application, or uses. It should be understood that throughout the drawings, corresponding reference numerals indicate like or corresponding parts and features.
[0036] The inventors have discovered design factors of a cold spray lubricant coating to reduce the coefficient of friction of the coating. As used herein, the term cold spray should be construed to mean a process in which solid powder particles (in the diameter ranges set forth below in m) are accelerated in a supersonic gas jet to high velocities. During impact with a substrate, the solid powder particles undergo plastic deformation and adhere to the surface of the substrate. Cold spray process temperatures can range between about 0 C. to about 1100 C.
[0037] Generally, the present disclosure includes an alloy feedstock consisting of a metal powder, such as copper or nickel, and a solid lubricant, such as tungsten disulfide (WS.sub.2) powder or molybdenum disulfide (MoS.sub.2). Pure WS.sub.2 powder and pure MoS.sub.2 were also evaluated as set forth in greater detail below.
[0038] In one form, a lubricant mixture with 1.4 wt. % WS.sub.2 (tungsten disulfide, 5 m) mixed with Cu powder (11-38 m) showed lower friction and wear than a control 316 SS (stainless steel) sample, but the coefficient of friction (COF) was poor (generally >0.3), and the endurance was poor, with failure generally occurring after only a few hundred cycles. In addition, the small amount of WS.sub.2 kept the Cu powder from building up to a significant thickness on the substrate.
[0039] In other variations, a smaller metal particle size (1 m) was paired with a larger WS.sub.2 particle size (24 m). Larger WS.sub.2 contents also appear to be more promising, and thus these particle sizes were used with a Cu/20 wt. % WS.sub.2 mixture. The performance was highly dependent on both the N.sub.2 gas temperature and powder feed rate. (The feed rates are presented in arbitrary units of percent, with 100% being the maximum capacity of the powder feeder unit; actual units in terms of mass flow per second were not determined).
[0040] For example,
[0041] Since increased WS.sub.2 contents in composite coatings appeared promising, pure WS.sub.2 cold spray coatings were tested. Again, performance was highly dependent on both the N.sub.2 gas temperature and powder feed rate.
[0042] X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) spectrometry was utilized for understanding the cold spray process in that it enables correlating the coating composition with deposition parameters and ultimately performance. It has also shown that the nominal metal:solid lubricant powder ratio added to the powder feeder is markedly different from the actual composition of the coating.
[0043] Data showed that sulfide particle size affects the sulfide content in the coatings, as does the type of co-deposited metal (i.e., Cu vs Ni vs Al). The type of cold spray equipment also has an effect on the composition of the coatings. Specifically, coatings on one piece of equipment have extremely high sulfide content (i.e., >90 wt %), compared to the coatings with other equipment (i.e., 10-63 wt %).
[0044] The particle size of the metallic powders was shown to have an impact on coating performance. The tests demonstrated improved coating performance by reducing the size of the Cu particles and enlarging the size of the WS.sub.2 particles. However, smaller powder size has a tendency to clog in the equipment. Therefore, the powder should be large enough to flow through the machine but small enough to create a strong composite dry film lubricant. Thus, further forms of the present disclosure include Cu powder size of 5 m and other formulations, including the use of other metallic powders and MoS.sub.2.
[0045] Another important parameter is coating thickness and uniformity, which relates directly to both friction and endurance. Cross-sections of some of the coatings obtained using focused ion beam (FIB) technology were analyzed using Scanning Electron Microscopy equipped with Energy Dispersive X-ray analysis (SEM/EDX). The coating substrate interface can be difficult to analyze by SEM alone, but EDX can be used to give elemental maps that show the distribution of coating materials that more clearly show thickness and uniformity of the coatings.
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[0049] The friction of the pure WS.sub.2 coating exhibits lower and more constant friction compared to the Cu/WS.sub.2 coating. This is likely due to the higher uniformity of the pure WS.sub.2 coating. The relatively small thickness of these coatings (<0.0002 inch) is important for certain tolerance-sensitive applications, for example, in ball bearing applications.
[0050] As discussed above, X-ray Fluorescence (XRF) spectrometry was used to understand the cold spray process and to correlate the coating composition with deposition parameters and ultimately performance. For example, the nominal metal:solid lubricant powder ratio added to the powder feeder is markedly different from the actual composition (see
[0051] Further variations of the present disclosure include Cu/WS.sub.2 coatings using 24 m WS.sub.2 mixed with 1 m, 5 m, or 10 m Cu powders. In addition, the WS.sub.2 content of the Cu/WS.sub.2 coatings may be increased.
[0052] Also, additional metals to mix with WS.sub.2, including Ni and alloys such as NiTi are contemplated by the teachings herein. As indicated above, WS.sub.2 may be replaced with MoS.sub.2, since MoS.sub.2 often outperforms WS.sub.2 in many solid lubricant formulations, and further it is more widely used in the spacecraft industry.
[0053] In one variation of the present disclosure, the cold spray coating includes MoS.sub.2 without additives in the powder feeder and has particle sizes between 100 nm to 24 m. In this form, the gas temperature is between 40 C.-800 C. and the feeder gas is Nitrogen. In another variation, the feeder gas is Helium.
[0054] In another form, the cold spray coating includes WS.sub.2 without additives in the powder feeder with particle sizes between 1 m to 70 m. The gas temperature is between 40 C.-800 C. The feeder may be Nitrogen or Helium.
[0055] In another form, the cold spray coatings include a mixture of a metal with either the MoS.sub.2, with a particle size between 100 nm to 24 m, or WS.sub.2, with a particle size between 100 nm to 70 m, to form a composite metal lubricant coating. Similarly, feeder gas may be Nitrogen or Helium. Further, the gas temperature is between 40 C.-800 C. The metal species used in the cold spray coating mixture is either a pure element or an alloy including at least one of nickel, copper, titanium, aluminum, silver, tin, brass, bronze, indium, steel, titanium alloy Ti6Al4V, aluminum alloy Al6061, and other similar elements or alloys. In one variation, the metal is a copper alloy and has a particle size between 40 nm to 38 m. In another variation, the metal is a nickel alloy and has a particle size between 200 nm to 45 m. In yet another variation, the composition in the powder feeder is greater than 0 and up to 80 wt. % mixed metal.
[0056] In one aspect, the cold spray coating includes WS.sub.2 without additives, wherein the WS.sub.2 has a particle size of 100 nm. In another form, the WS.sub.2 has a particle size of 0.58 m. For both aforementioned particle sizes, Nitrogen carrier gas is used at 370 C. In another form, MoS.sub.2 with a particle size of 15 m is employed without additives, which is used in the powder feeder for the cold spray coatings with a Nitrogen carrier gas at 370 C.
[0057] In yet another form, the powder mixture in the powder feeder is a mixture of 1 m particle size Copper with 90% wt. % of 100 nm particle size WS.sub.2 with a Nitrogen carrier gas at 425 C. In another variation, the powder feeder mixture is a mixture of 1 m particle size Copper with 90% wt. % of 15 m particle size WS.sub.2 with a Nitrogen carrier gas at 370 C. In yet another variation, the cold spray coating powder feeder mixture is a mixture of 5 m particle size Nickel with 80% wt. % of 15 m particle size MoS.sub.2 with a Nitrogen carrier gas at 425 C.
[0058] Referring to
[0059] Further testing shown in
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[0061] Referring to
[0062] Because these test results demonstrated improved performance (i.e., lower COF and higher endurance) with lower amounts of Cu and Ni, further testing was conducted on pure WS.sub.2 and MoS.sub.2, also at 10N normal load.
[0063] Unless otherwise expressly indicated herein, all numerical values indicating mechanical/thermal properties, compositional percentages, dimensions and/or tolerances, or other characteristics are to be understood as modified by the word about or approximately in describing the scope of the present disclosure. This modification is desired for various reasons including industrial practice, material, manufacturing, and assembly tolerances, and testing capability.
[0064] As used herein, the phrase at least one of A, B, and C should be construed to mean a logical (A OR B OR C), using a non-exclusive logical OR, and should not be construed to mean at least one of A, at least one of B, and at least one of C.
[0065] The description of the disclosure is merely exemplary in nature and, thus, variations that do not depart from the substance of the disclosure are intended to be within the scope of the disclosure. Such variations are not to be regarded as a departure from the spirit and scope of the disclosure.