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Thermal Barrier Coatings Design with Increased Reflectivity and Lower Thermal Conductivity for High‐Temperature Turbine Applications
Author(s) -
Kelly Matthew J.,
Wolfe Douglas E.,
Singh Jogender,
Eldridge Jeff,
Zhu DongMing,
Miller Robert
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
international journal of applied ceramic technology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.4
H-Index - 57
eISSN - 1744-7402
pISSN - 1546-542X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7402.2006.02073.x
Subject(s) - thermal barrier coating , materials science , coating , composite material , thermal conductivity , layer (electronics) , physical vapor deposition , electron beam physical vapor deposition , cubic zirconia , residual stress , evaporation , optics , optoelectronics , chemical vapor deposition , ceramic , physics , thermodynamics
High reflectance thermal barrier coatings consisting of 7% Yittria‐Stabilized Zirconia (7YSZ) and Al 2 O 3 were deposited by co‐evaporation using electron beam physical vapor deposition (EB‐PVD). Multilayer 7YSZ and Al 2 O 3 coatings with fixed layer spacing showed a 73% infrared reflectance maxima at 1.85 μm wavelength. The variable 7YSZ and Al 2 O 3 multilayer coatings showed an increase in reflection spectrum from 1 to 2.75 μm. Preliminary results suggest that coating reflectance can be tailored to achieve increased reflectance over a desired wavelength range by controlling the thickness of the individual layers. In addition, microstructural enhancements were also used to produce low thermal conductive and high hemispherical reflective thermal barrier coatings (TBCs) in which the coating flux was periodically interrupted creating modulated strain fields within the TBC. TBC showed no macrostructural differences in the grain size or faceted surface morphology at low magnification as compared with standard TBC. The residual stress state was determined to be compressive in all of the TBC samples, and was found to decrease with increasing number of modulations. The average thermal conductivity was shown to decrease approximately 30% from 1.8 to 1.2 W/m‐K for the 20‐layer monolithic TBC after 2 h of testing at 1316°C. Monolithic modulated TBC also resulted in a 28% increase in the hemispherical reflectance, and increased with increasing total number of modulations.