Component repair using brazed surface textured superalloy foil
09782862 · 2017-10-10
Assignee
Inventors
- Ahmed Kamel (Orlando, FL, US)
- Dhafer Jouini (Orlando, FL, US)
- Gary B. Merrill (Orlando, FL, US)
- Kazim Ozbaysal (Charlotte, NC, US)
Cpc classification
C22C19/056
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F01D5/288
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23K35/304
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
F01D5/282
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B23K35/3033
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22F1/18
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B32B15/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22C30/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
Y10T428/12618
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
B23P6/005
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K1/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
International classification
B23P6/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K1/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K1/20
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C22C30/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
F01D5/28
MECHANICAL ENGINEERING; LIGHTING; HEATING; WEAPONS; BLASTING
B32B15/01
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K35/30
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B23K35/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A superalloy component such as a gas turbine engine blade (40) having a ceramic thermal barrier coating (41) is repaired using a textured repair foil (30). A degraded region of the thermal barrier coating is removed (14) and the underlying superalloy material surface is prepared (16) for re-coating. The repair foil is includes a layer of boron-free braze material (34) and a layer of superalloy material (32) having a textured surface (36). The foil is brazed (18) to the prepared surface during a solution heat treatment effective to homogenize the braze (20). A new area of thermal barrier coating (46) is applied over the foil with a bond that is enhanced by the texturing of the foil surface.
Claims
1. A method comprising: removing a degraded portion of a thermal barrier coating from a repair area of a component to reveal an underlying superalloy substrate material; applying a foil to the repair area, the foil comprising a layer of alloy material and a layer of braze material, the braze material being placed in contact with the underlying superalloy substrate material; wherein the layer of alloy material comprises a layer of superalloy material adjacent the braze material and a layer of bond coat material on the layer of superalloy material; and attaching the foil to the component with a braze heat treatment; and applying a new thermal barrier coating onto the bond coat material.
2. A method comprising: removing a degraded portion of a thermal barrier coating from a repair area of a component to reveal an underlying superalloy substrate material; applying a foil to the repair area, the foil comprising a layer of alloy material and a layer of braze material on a side of the alloy material, the braze material being placed in contact with the underlying superalloy substrate material; attaching the foil to the component with a braze heat treatment; and applying a new thermal barrier coating onto the alloy material; wherein the braze material comprises a ternary alloy comprising a composition in wt. % of: Cr 15-25%; Ti 15-25%; balance Ni.
3. A method comprising: removing a degraded portion of a thermal barrier coating from a repair area of a component to reveal an underlying superalloy substrate material; applying a foil to the repair area, the foil comprising a layer of alloy material and a layer of braze material on a side of the alloy material, the braze material being placed in contact with the underlying superalloy substrate material; attaching the foil to the component with a braze heat treatment; and applying a new thermal barrier coating onto the alloy material; wherein the braze material comprises a composition in wt. % within the following ranges: Cr 12-16%; Ti 13-16%; Al 0-2.5%; Co 2-4%; W 3-5%; Mo 0-2%; Ta 0-2%; balance Ni.
4. A method comprising: removing a degraded portion of a thermal barrier coating from a repair area of a component to reveal an underlying superalloy substrate material; applying a foil to the repair area, the foil comprising a layer of alloy material and a layer of braze material on a side of the alloy material, the braze material being placed in contact with the underlying superalloy substrate material; attaching the foil to the component with a braze heat treatment; and applying a new thermal barrier coating onto the alloy material; wherein the braze material comprises a composition in wt. % within the following ranges: Cr 15-18%; Ti 10-15%; Al 0-2.5%; Co 2-4%; W 3-5%; Mo 0-2%; Ta 0-2%; balance Ni.
5. A method comprising: removing a degraded portion of a thermal barrier coating from a repair area of a component to reveal an underlying superalloy substrate material; applying a foil to the repair area, the foil comprising a layer of alloy material and a layer of braze material on a side of the alloy material, the braze material being placed in contact with the underlying superalloy substrate material; attaching the foil to the component with a braze heat treatment; and applying a new thermal barrier coating onto the alloy material; wherein the braze material comprises a composition in wt. % within the following ranges: Cr 15-19%; Ti 8-10%; Al 0-2.5%; Co 14-18%; Mo 12-16%; balance Ni.
6. A method comprising: preparing a foil comprising a layer of alloy material and a layer of braze material; creating irregularities on a surface of the alloy material opposed the layer of braze material by one of an etching process, a casting process, or a spark plasma sintering process; removing a degraded portion of a thermal barrier coating from a repair area of a component to reveal an underlying superalloy substrate material; applying the foil to the repair area, the braze material being placed in contact with the underlying superalloy substrate material; attaching the foil to the component with a braze heat treatment; and applying a new thermal barrier coating onto the surface of the alloy material over the irregularities.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention is explained in the following description in view of the drawings that show:
(2)
(3)
(4)
(5)
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(6) While existing repair techniques are effective for returning some gas turbine hot gas path components to service, the repaired components remain vulnerable to the same types of degradation as had originally caused the component to degrade. The present inventors have developed a process that not only repairs a degraded component, but also can reduce the vulnerability of the repaired component to the damaging conditions experienced upon return to service. Advantageously, when the inventive process is applied to a degraded area of a component removed from service, the improvement is thus applied precisely to the most vulnerable (previously degraded) area of the component, thereby potentially extending the operational life of the repaired component to beyond that obtained by the new component. Furthermore, the inventive process can be applied during the manufacturing of a new component to extend its service life when such areas of vulnerability are known from experience on other components or from analytical predictions.
(7) A method in accordance with one embodiment of the invention is described with reference to
(8) An embodiment of a repair foil 30 as may be used in step 18 of
(9) As illustrated in
(10)
(11) Because the foil 30 has a limited thickness, it can be brazed 18 to the substrate material 44 and then coated with the new thermal barrier coating 46 essentially as thick as the original coating material without causing any unevenness in the finished surface at the edges 48 of the underlying foil 30, thereby maintaining the aerodynamic performance of the repaired component as originally designed. As a result of the improved mechanical adhesion between the textured surface 36 and the overlying new thermal barrier coating 46, the refurbished leading edge region 42 may provide improved service performance when compared to the original blade 40 not having such a feature.
(12) The braze material 34 may be selected to be boron and silicon free and to have a melting temperature and range below a solution heat treatment temperature used to restore the material properties of the component substrate material. When using a braze material incorporating a melting point depressant such as titanium, hafnium or zirconium or other material included in the composition of the underlying superalloy substrate material, the solution heat treatment is effective to homogenize the braze such that no discontinuity exists between the superalloy material 32 of the repair foil 30 and that of the underlying substrate 44.
(13) A ternary alloy for such applications may have compositions within the following ranges (all compositions disclosed herein are in units of wt. %):
(14) Cr 15-25%;
(15) Ti 15-25%;
(16) balance Ni.
(17) Particular braze alloys within this group may have the following compositions: Cr 16.3%, Ti 21.2%, balance Ni; or Cr 17.2%, Ti 20.9%, balance Ni. These particular braze alloy compositions exhibit a solidus temperature of about 1,205° C. and a liquidus temperature of about 1,215° C., and thus a melting temperature range of only 10° C. As such, they may be particularly useful when brazing to Alloy 247 or Rene 80. Another braze alloy within this group has the following composition: Cr 20%, Ti 20%, Ni 60%.
(18) Other braze alloys may have compositions within the following ranges:
(19) Cr 12-16%;
(20) Ti 13-16%;
(21) Al 0-2.5%;
(22) Co 2-4%;
(23) W 3-5%;
(24) Mo 0-2%;
(25) Ta 0-2%;
(26) balance Ni.
(27) A particular braze alloy within this group may have the following composition: Cr 14.1%, Ti 14%, Al 2.1%, Co 3.1%, W 4.1%, Mo 1%, Ta 1%, balance Ni. This particular braze alloy composition may be particularly useful when brazing to Alloy 247.
(28) Other braze alloys may have compositions within the following ranges:
(29) Cr 15-18%;
(30) Ti 10-15%;
(31) Al 0-2.5%;
(32) Co 2-4%;
(33) W 3-5%;
(34) Mo 0-2%;
(35) Ta 0-2%;
(36) balance Ni.
(37) A particular braze alloy within this group may have the following composition: Cr 17.57%, Ti 13.54%, Al 2.39%, Co 3.24%, W 3.47%, Mo 1.15%, Ta 0.83%, balance Ni. This particular braze alloy composition exhibits a solidus temperature of about 1,205° C. and a liquidus temperature of about 1,220° C., and thus a melting temperature range of only 15° C. As such, it may be particularly useful when brazing to Alloy 247 or Rene 80.
(38) Other braze alloys may have compositions within the following ranges:
(39) Cr 15-19%;
(40) Ti 8-10%;
(41) Al 0-2.5%;
(42) Co 14-18%;
(43) Mo 12-16%;
(44) balance Ni.
(45) A particular braze alloy within this group may have the following composition: Cr 15.12%, Ti 10%, Al 2.12%, Co 15.8%, Mo 12.97%, balance Ni. This particular braze alloy composition exhibits a solidus temperature of about 1,205° C. and a liquidus temperature of about 1,223° C., and thus a melting temperature range of only 18° C. As such, it may be particularly useful when brazing to Alloy 247 or IN 939.
(46) A typical solution heat treatment effective to homogenize a braze joint of such alloys may be: heat the assembly to 1,472° F. at 15-30° F. per minute; hold at 1,472° F. for 20 minutes; heat to 2,125° F. at 15-30° F. per minute; hold at 2,125° F. for 20 minutes; heat to 2,192-2,282° F. at 1-30° F. per minute; hold at 2,192-2,282° F. for 2-12 hours; furnace cool to 2,120-2,192° F.; hold at 2,120-2,192° F. up to 20 minutes; argon cool to room temperature.
(47)
(48) While various embodiments of the present invention have been shown and described herein, it will be obvious that such embodiments are provided by way of example only. Numerous variations, changes and substitutions may be made without departing from the invention herein.