Ceramic coating cracks corrosion

Researchers at Pacific Northwest National Laboratory have developed a new ceramic-based coating for steel and superalloys that prevents the degeneration that occurs in hostile environments.

Researchers at

Pacific Northwest National Laboratory

have developed a new ceramic-based coating for steel and superalloys that prevents corrosion, oxidation, carburisation and sulphidation that commonly occur in gas, liquid, steam and other hostile environments.

The new coating bonds with the metal substrate and is “resilient, inexpensive and simple,” said PNNL scientist Chuck Henager. Because the coating is fabricated at significantly lower temperatures than typically required for conventional ceramic coatings, the new process also can save energy and reduce harmful emissions, he said.

Researchers created the coating by mixing a liquid preceramic polymer with aluminium metal-flake powders to form a slurry that can be applied to a metal object by dipping, painting or air-spraying. A low-temperature curing process follows, using a Ruthenium-based catalyst that enables polymer cross-linking and dries the slurry to a green state. The coated steel is then heated in air, nitrogen or argon at 700 to 900 degrees Celsius. The heat converts the green state layer into an aluminium diffusion/reaction layer that permeates the surface of the steel and provides an aluminide surface coating on the steel.

According to PNNL Commercialisation Manager Eric Lund, the diffusion reaction makes the coating so durable that it can’t be chipped or scratched off.

The reaction layer on the surface of the steel is much stronger than an external coating because it is an integral part of the steel, Henager said. This layer develops during use as the coating is heated at very high temperatures, such as those that occur with the heating of pipes in a process facility.

The liquid form of the coating can be applied with a spray gun, which makes the PNNL coating practical for protecting large areas, the researchers said.