Suspension plasma sprayed YSZ coatings were deposited at lab-scale and production-scale facilities to investigate the effect of process equipment on coating properties. The target application for these coatings is SOFC electrolytes, so dense microstructures with low permeabilities were desired. Both facilities had the same torch but different suspension feeding systems, torch robots and substrate holders. These differences meant that the lab facility had higher torch-substrate relative speeds compared to the production facility. When using porous stainless steel substrates with relatively smooth surfaces, permeabilities and microstructures were comparable for coatings from both facilities, and no segmentation cracks were observed. Coating permeability could be further reduced by increasing substrate temperatures during deposition or reducing suspension feed rates. On rougher substrates representative of SOFC cathodes, production facility coatings had higher permeabilities and more segmentation cracks compared to lab coatings. The increased cracking may be due to larger heat impulses with each torch pass at the production facility caused by its lower torch-substrate relative speed. This work highlights some of the challenges associated with scaling up the spray process from the lab to production.

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