Ceramics-Silikáty 45, (1) 1 - 8 (2001) |
|
VARIATION OF PLASMA SPRAY DEPOSITS MICROSTRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES FORMED BY PARTICLES PASSING THROUGH DIFFERENT AREAS OF PLASMA JET |
Neufuss Karel 1, Ilavský Jan 2,3, Kolman Blahoslav 1,
Dubský Jiří 1,
Rohan Pavel 1,
Chráska Pavel 1 |
1 Institute of Plasma Physics, Academy of Sciences CR,
Za Slovankou 3, 182 21, Prague, Czech Republic
2 National Institute of Standards and Technology, Gaithersburg, MD, USA
3 University of Maryland, College Park, MD, USA
|
Different trajectories of powder particles in the plasma jet during spraying result in different states of the particles/molten
droplets on impact, resulting in the variation of microstructure and homogeneity of the deposits. The distribution of
trajectories in the jet is related to the overall spray setup, i.e. to the spray parameters such as number and geometry of powder
injectors, flow rate and type of the powder feeding gas, powder size distribution and its chemical and mechanical properties,
etc. This paper studies the deposits microstructure and properties (density, porosity, phase composition, etc.) and relates them
to the distribution of particles in the plasma jet during spraying. Free-standing tubes are selected then as an example of the
industrially important application and their microstructure is compared with microstructures of flat samples documenting
microstructure variation related to different particle trajectories in the jet.The two materials studied are Alumina (Al₂O₃ +
3wt.% TiO₂) and natural ZrSiO₄. Significant microstructure variation related to particle trajectories were found for alumina
deposits; for example, the alpha phase content varied between about 5 and 50 %, the porosity volume varied between about
3.8 and 8 % (about 2x), and the pore surface area varied between about 1.5 × 10⁴ to about 6.5 × 10⁴ cm² cm⁻³ (about 4x). Also
the microstructure anisotropy documented by small-angle neutron scattering varied significantly. Variation in the
microstructure of the ZrSiO₄ seemed to be less significant. |
PDF (0.4 MB) |
|