TY - JOUR
T1 - Study of the microstructural control of Ba(Mg1/3Ta2/3)O3 perovskite thermal barrier coating deposited by solution precursor plasma spray
AU - Hou, Huidong
AU - Veilleux, Jocelyn
AU - Gitzhofer, François
AU - Wang, Quansheng
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Elsevier B.V.
PY - 2020/5/15
Y1 - 2020/5/15
N2 - Inductively-coupled plasma spraying was used to deposit Ba(Mg1/3Ta2/3)O3 (BMT) on a titanium alloy substrate. By selecting the appropriate spraying parameter, it was possible to tune the BMT coating microstructure from dense splat-like layers to columns and segmented vertical cracks. Of those parameters, a short spraying distance of 34 mm was the most crucial parameter to form a columnar microstructure. An atomization probe that fed a bimodal droplet size distribution was considered as an important prerequisite to obtain a high-quality columnar structure. Small atomized droplet sizes contribute to the formation of columns, while the large ones ensure a high deposition rate. This is further discussed as part of the column formation mechanism. The effects of substrate surface roughness, precursor concentration and feed rate were studied separately. The surface roughness should be controlled between Ra = 1.3 μm and Ra = 2.7 μm to reduce the intercolumnar gaps. The columnar structure evolves into a segmented vertical cracked one when spraying concentrated precursors (30 wt%). High feed rate (>6 ml/min) can satisfy a series of requirements such as high deposition rate, low intercolumnar gaps and high intracolumnar porosity. Finally, a desired columnar structure with an intracolumnar porosity of 4.3% and an intercolumnar porosity of 9.9% was obtained by spraying a 10 wt% concentration precursor on a finely sand-blasted substrate (Ra = 1.3 μm) at a feed rate of 8 ml/min.
AB - Inductively-coupled plasma spraying was used to deposit Ba(Mg1/3Ta2/3)O3 (BMT) on a titanium alloy substrate. By selecting the appropriate spraying parameter, it was possible to tune the BMT coating microstructure from dense splat-like layers to columns and segmented vertical cracks. Of those parameters, a short spraying distance of 34 mm was the most crucial parameter to form a columnar microstructure. An atomization probe that fed a bimodal droplet size distribution was considered as an important prerequisite to obtain a high-quality columnar structure. Small atomized droplet sizes contribute to the formation of columns, while the large ones ensure a high deposition rate. This is further discussed as part of the column formation mechanism. The effects of substrate surface roughness, precursor concentration and feed rate were studied separately. The surface roughness should be controlled between Ra = 1.3 μm and Ra = 2.7 μm to reduce the intercolumnar gaps. The columnar structure evolves into a segmented vertical cracked one when spraying concentrated precursors (30 wt%). High feed rate (>6 ml/min) can satisfy a series of requirements such as high deposition rate, low intercolumnar gaps and high intracolumnar porosity. Finally, a desired columnar structure with an intracolumnar porosity of 4.3% and an intercolumnar porosity of 9.9% was obtained by spraying a 10 wt% concentration precursor on a finely sand-blasted substrate (Ra = 1.3 μm) at a feed rate of 8 ml/min.
KW - BMT
KW - Columnar structure
KW - Inductively-coupled RF plasma
KW - Microstructure control
KW - RF SPPS
KW - Solution precursor plasma spray
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85082397739&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.surfcoat.2020.125633
DO - 10.1016/j.surfcoat.2020.125633
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85082397739
SN - 0257-8972
VL - 389
JO - Surface and Coatings Technology
JF - Surface and Coatings Technology
M1 - 125633
ER -