Plasma Spray‐Physical Vapor Deposition (PS‐PVD) of Ceramics for Protective Coatings
Author(s) -
Bryan J. Harder,
Donghui Zhu
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
ceramic engineering and science proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.128
H-Index - 33
eISSN - 1940-6339
pISSN - 0196-6219
DOI - 10.1002/9781118095232.ch7
Subject(s) - physical vapor deposition , materials science , vapour deposition , deposition (geology) , ceramic , chemical vapor deposition , composite material , chemical engineering , nanotechnology , coating , geology , engineering , paleontology , sediment
In order to generate advanced multilayer thermal and environmental protection systems, a new deposition process is needed to bridge the gap between conventional plasma spray, which produces relatively thick coatings on the order of 125-250 microns, and conventional vapor phase processes such as electron beam physical vapor deposition (EB-PVD) which are limited by relatively slow deposition rates, high investment costs, and coating material vapor pressure requirements. The use of Plasma Spray - Physical Vapor Deposition (PS-PVD) processing fills this gap and allows thin (< 10 microns) single layers to be deposited and multilayer coatings of less than 100 microns to be generated with the flexibility to tailor microstructures by changing processing conditions. Coatings of yttria-stabilized zirconia (YSZ) were applied to NiCrAlY bond coated superalloy substrates using the PS-PVD coater at NASA Glenn Research Center. A design-of-experiments was used to examine the effects of process variables (Ar/He plasma gas ratio, the total plasma gas flow, and the torch current) on chamber pressure and torch power. Coating thickness, phase and microstructure were evaluated for each set of deposition conditions. Low chamber pressures and high power were shown to increase coating thickness and create columnar-like structures. Likewise, high chamber pressures and low power had lower growth rates, but resulted in flatter, more homogeneous layers
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