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Proceedings Papers
ITSC 2006, Thermal Spray 2006: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 1107-1112, May 15–18, 2006,
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Newly developed iron based hard alloy powders with high chromium and vanadium contents are used for coating production by means of HVOF and LPPS. Crack free and dense coatings with fairly homogeneous microstructure are possible for both spraying methods. XRD analyses of sprayed coatings prove phase compositions similar to those of the powder feedstock when using HVOF systems. In contrast LPPS coatings contain a large share of amorphous phase. Microhardness of LPPS and HVOF coatings is about 1,200 HV0.3 and 800 - 950 HV0.3 respectively. The higher microhardness of LPPS coatings is attributed to the presence of the amorphous phase. However, LPPS coatings are brittle and tend to crack under mechanical load. Wear resistance of coatings is determined by means of corundum grinding disk and ASTM G65 wear test. Corrosion behavior is characterized by means of salt fog test and electrochemical measurements. Cermet and stainless steel 316L coatings are used for comparative purposes in the investigations.
Proceedings Papers
ITSC 2005, Thermal Spray 2005: Proceedings from the International Thermal Spray Conference, 1249-1253, May 2–4, 2005,
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Application of cold gas spraying for deposition of braze filler coatings is investigated. Different light weight alloy substrates, i.e. aluminum AA1050, AA3005, AA5754 and AA7022, magnesium AZ91 and titanium TiAl6V4, are used. Filler coating materials depend on the substrate melting temperature. So for aluminum alloys Al12Si and zinc based fillers, for AZ91 pure zinc and for Ti6Al4V different Cu-Ni blends are applied. CGS process parameters are varied with regard to process gas (nitrogen) temperature and pressure, powder feed rate and spray distance. Correlation to process characteristics and economical aspects are given. The usability of the produced filler coatings is shown by different optimized brazing/soldering processes. In case of aluminum braze joints a full metallographical investigation is carried out by optical and scanning electron microscopy as well as EDXS analyses. The gathered results are compared with those of conventional filler material addition, i.e. wire, roll plating and foil.