FIELD OF THE INVENTION
[0001] The present invention relates to a protective coating for a gas turbine blade or
other component wherein the coating includes an aluminum-bearing coating applied at
a relatively high temperature region of the component and a chromium-bearing coating
applied at another relatively lower temperature region of the component depending
on coating functionality needed.
BACKGROUND OF THE INVENTION
[0002] Current gas turbine designs are requiring that a variety of coatings be applied to
different areas of the turbine part for different functional reasons. Examples of
coating functionality include wear, oxidation, thermal barrier, and hot corrosion.
Turbine designers choose an appropriate coating for a particular functionality in
the gas turbine environment.
[0003] Hot corrosion is a form of accelerated oxidation when a liquid salt is present on
the surface of a Ni and Co based superalloy component. The salt is usually sodium
sulfate with other naturally occurring constituents, such as K, Ca, and/or Mg, present.
It is well known that as the Cr content of an alloy increases, its resistance to hot
corrosion attack increases. Current methods to increase surface Cr content are pack
and vapor phase chromizing, which comprise one-step deposition and reaction with the
Ni substrate alloy, forming a Cr-enriched alloy zone. The chromizing process is facilitated
by halide (Cl or F) activators that form Cr-halide gases at relatively high temperatures,
such as greater than 1038 °C (1900 degrees F).
[0004] Since pack and vapor phase chromizing require high temperature application above
1038 °C (1900 degrees F) and are difficult to apply to localized part areas of interest,
these processes must be applied early in the part routing to the entire the part.
Masking has not been effective in these processes as a means for controlling the localized
deposition of the chromium on certain areas of interest and, as a result, has not
been applied in these high temperature processes.
SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION
[0005] The present invention provides in an embodiment a method of forming a protective
coating on a gas turbine component wherein the duplex coating includes an aluminum-bearing
coating applied at one region of the gas turbine component where relatively higher
temperatures are encountered in service and a chromium-bearing coating applied at
another region of the turbine blade or other component where relatively lower temperatures
and hot corrosion are encountered in service, thereby providing coating functionality
for the different temperatures and oxidation/corrosion environments to be encountered
by the gas turbine component.
[0006] In an illustrative embodiment of the present invention, the method involves forming
a duplex coating on a superalloy substrate by first applying an aluminum-bearing coating
on the first relatively higher temperature region of the substrate, secondly applying
a metallic coating comprising chromium on an adjacent relatively lower temperature
region of the substrate followed by diffusing chromium into the substrate to form
a chromium-enriched diffused coating thereon at the adjacent relatively lower temperature
region. The aluminum-bearing coating is applied in a first step by high temperature
vapor deposition, while the chromium-bearing coating is applied in a subsequent second
step at a relatively lower temperature, such as less than 260 °C (500 degrees F).
The method typically involves applying masking on the relatively lower temperature
region before the aluminum-bearing coating is applied on the relatively higher temperature
region and subsequently applying masking on the relatively higher temperature region
before the metallic coating of chromium is applied on the relatively lower temperature
region.
[0007] In the event the substrate is a gas turbine component, the method is practiced by
first applying a mask on a root region of the component, then applying an aluminum-bearing
coating, such as a diffusion aluminide coating, on an airfoil region, de-masking the
root portion, and then masking the already-coated airfoil region. Then, the method
involves depositing a metallic coating comprising chromium on at least a portion of
a relatively lower temperature root region that will be subject to hot corrosion,
de-masking the airfoil region followed by diffusing the chromium into the alloy at
the coated portion of the root region to form a chromium-enriched diffused surface
coating on the portion of the root region. The aluminum-bearing coating optionally
can be applied to cover the airfoil region and also an intermediate platform region
and root shank region. An attachment portion, such as a fir tree portion, of the root
region may be left uncoated to enhance fatigue life of the root region where it is
connected to a turbine disk.
[0008] In a particular embodiment of the present invention, a relatively low temperature
deposition process embodying a liquid deposition medium, such as electroplating bath,
electrophoretic bath, liquid slurry, and others, is used to form a metallic coating
comprising a majority of chromium on at least a portion of the relatively lower temperature
region of a precursor component. The chromium coating is applied as a very thin layer
having a thickness of 0.00127 to 0.127 mm (0.00005 to 0.005 inch). Diffusion of the
as-deposited chromium into the substrate typically is effected by elevated temperature
heat treatment after the masking is removed from the previously-applied aluminum-bearing
coating on the airfoil region.
[0009] The present invention envisions a nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component
precursor having an aluminum-bearing coating applied on an airfoil region and metallic
coating comprising substantially pure chromium or a chromium alloy applied on at least
a portion of the root region of the component. The chromium coating then is diffused
into the alloy to form a diffused chromium-enriched coating on the portion of the
root region of the gas turbine blade. The diffused chromium-enriched coating has an
outermost region that comprises at least about 20%, preferably about 25%, and more
preferably about 30% to about 60% by weight Cr.
[0010] Advantages, features, and embodiments of the present invention will become apparent
from the following description.
DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
[0011]
Figure 1 is a schematic view of a gas turbine blade having an aluminum-bearing coating
AL on the airfoil region and on the platform region surface facing the hot gas path
in order to form a protective alumina scale or layer in service and having a diffused
chromium-enriched coating CR on the root region and on the platform region facing
away from the hot gas path in order to form a protective chromia scale or layer in
service.
Figure 2 is a schematic view of an intermediate gas turbine blade precursor having
an aluminum-bearing coating AL on the airfoil region and on the platform region surface
facing the hot gas path to form a protective alumina scale or layer in service and
having a metallic chromium coating ECR on the root region and on the platform region
facing away from the hot gas path in order to be diffused into the alloy to form a
protective diffused chromium-enriched coating.
Figures 3 and 4 are further schematic views of other embodiments of a gas turbine
blade where the aluminum-bearing coating and the chromium-bearing coating reside on
various illustrative regions of the turbine blade.
Figure 5 is a graph of chromium concentration profiles (Cr concentration versus distance
into the CMSX-4 nickel base superalloy substrate) at a shank portion of the root region
after pack chromizing and after masking the shank region and aluminizing to form a
Pt-modified diffusion aluminide (Pt-Al) coating on the airfoil. The root region includes
the shank portion and the fir tree attachment portion of the turbine blade.
Figure 6 is graph of Cr concentration versus distance into the CMSX-4 nickel base
superalloy substrate showing effects of Cr plating thickness and diffusion conditions
on Cr concentration in the substrate. The distance of "0" is the surface of the substrate.
Figure 7 is a photomicrograph of the microstructure of a CMSX-4 specimen electroplated
with 8.7 µm of Cr plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating at 1079 °C
(1975 degrees F) for four hours.
Figure 8 shows hot corrosion test results at 700 degrees C plotted as weight change
versus exposure hours for the various CMSX-4 specimens shown, which were tested in
duplicate. The test involved applying 1-2 mg/cm2 to the specimen surface at each 25 hour specimen inspection.
Figure 9 is a photomicrograph of a CMSX-4 specimen electroplated with 8.7 µm of Cr
plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating at 1079 °C (1975 degrees F) for
four hours and subjected to hot corrosion with Na2SO4 applied to the specimen surface as in Figure 8. Through-holes (one shown) through
the specimen were not coated and show aggressive hot corrosion attack while coated
surfaces are protected.
Figure 10 is a photomicrograph of the microstructure of a CMSX-4 specimen electroplated
with 8.7 µm of Cr plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating at 1079 °C
(1975 degrees F) for four hours and then subjected to hot corrosion at 700 degrees
C with Na2SO4 applied to the specimen surface as in Figure 8.
Figure 11A is photomicrograph of a CMSX-4 specimen electroplated with 8.7 µm of Cr
plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating at 1079 °C (1975 degrees F) for
four hours. Figure 11B shows microprobe results as a table for specimen of Fig. 11A.
Figure 11C is a graphic plot showing variation of Cr content over distance into the
substrate alloy for the As-Plated sample (open triangle symbols), plated/diffusion-heat
treated sample (open square symbols), and plated/diffusion heat treated/hot corrosion
tested sample (open diamond symbols-Type I hot corrosion test). The distance of "0"
is the surface of the substrate.
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0012] In one embodiment of the present invention, a method is provided for forming a protective
coating on a gas turbine component wherein the coating includes an aluminum-bearing
coating applied at one region of the turbine blade or other component where relatively
higher temperatures are encountered in service and a chromium-bearing coating formed
at another adjacent region of the component where relatively lower temperatures and
hot corrosion are encountered in service. Such a duplex coating provides coating functionality
for the different temperatures and oxidation/corrosion environments to be encountered
in service.
[0013] The present invention is especially useful for protecting different regions of a
gas turbine blade component from oxidation and hot corrosion in service in a gas turbine
engine, although the invention is not limited to gas turbine components since it can
be practiced to protect other components against oxidation and hot corrosion. The
present invention can be practiced to protect nickel based superalloy gas turbine
components, nickel-cobalt based superalloy gas turbine components, or cobalt based
superalloy gas turbine components from hot corrosion, although the invention is not
limited to these alloys. For purposes of illustration and not limitation, the present
invention will be described below with respect to protection of different regions
of a gas turbine engine blade made of CMSX-4 nickel based superalloy against oxidation
and hot corrosion in service in a gas turbine engine.
[0014] In particular, Figure 1 shows an exemplary gas turbine blade 10 having an airfoil
region 12, a root region 14 and an intermediate platform region 20 between the airfoil
and root regions. The airfoil 12 includes a tip 12a, a leading edge 12b, and trailing
edge 12c subjected to the gas path of the engine turbine section. A platform region
20 typically separates the gas-path surfaces from non-gas path surfaces and includes
an upper platform surface facing the gas path and an lower platform surface facing
away from the gas path. The root region 14 includes non-gas path surfaces beneath
the lower side of the platform region 20 wherein the root region includes a an attachment
portion 16, such as a conventional fir tree portion, by which the turbine blade is
connected to the turbine disk (not shown) in usual manner and an adjacent shank portion
18 between the attachment portion 16 and the platform region 20. The fir tree typically
comprises machined serrations which fit into the turbine disk and which can be machined
before or after coating pursuant to customer specifications. The shank region 18 includes
the region between the fir tree and lower side of the platform region 20 and may include
as-cast and machined surfaces as well as features to aid sealing the gas path from
the non-gas path regions.
[0015] A first hotter region of the turbine blade 10 is subjected to relatively higher temperatures
and oxidation degradation in service in the gas turbine engine and comprises the airfoil
region 12 and surface 20a of a platform region 20 that faces toward the airfoil region
such that the airfoil region 12 and platform surface 20a operate in or near the hot
gas path of the turbine section of the gas turbine engine. The airfoil region 12 and
platform surface 20a are the hottest regions of the turbine blade and usually operate
above 1038 °C (1900 degrees F) for purposes of illustration and not limitation.
[0016] As a result of the relatively high operating temperatures encountered, the airfoil
region 12 and the platform surface 20a preferably are provided with a so-called alumina-former
coating thereon that produces an adherent protective scale of alumina in service in
the gas turbine engine.
[0017] A second relatively cooler region of the turbine blade 10 is subjected to relatively
lower temperatures and hot corrosion by salts, such as sodium sulfates and other constituents
such as K, Ca, and/or Mg, in service in the gas turbine engine. The second region
comprises the under (lower) surface 20b of a platform region 20 that faces away from
the airfoil region 12 and the root region 14. The second region thus involves a cooler
region that on older turbine blades may operate uncoated. However, as the combustor
efficiency has improved, the operating temperature of the second region is generally
increasing and spread more uniformly over the second region. Hence the first region
comprised of the airfoil 12 and platform surface surface 20a is also becoming hotter.
When salts of sodium sulphate are deposited on a surface that operates between 49
°C (120 degrees F) and 1010 °C (1850 degrees F), hot corrosion attack can occur. Combining
the high stress state of the blade root 14, with hot corrosion conditions, rapid attack
and fracture of the turbine blade in the root region can occur. For turbine blades
with uncoated root regions heretofore used in the lower temperature operating conditions,
hot corrosion resistance can be increased by increasing the chromium content of the
turbine blade alloy.
[0018] The present invention provides a multiplex coating and a method for applying the
coating to protect the different hotter and cooler regions of the turbine blade exposed
to more aggressive temperature/hot corrosion conditions associated recent engine designs.
The present invention provides a nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine blade 10 having
an aluminum-bearing coating AL applied on an airfoil region of the blade and a metallic
coating comprising chromium applied on at least a portion of the root region of the
blade and diffused into the alloy to form the diffused chromium-enriched coating CR
on the portion of the root region. Figure 1 illustrates the aluminum-bearing coating
AL and the chromium-bearing diffused coating CR on the airfoil and the root portion,
respectively. The aluminum-bearing coating AL comprises a so-called alumina-forming
coating in that it forms a thin adherent alumina scale on the coating in service.
The chromium-bearing diffused coating CR comprises a so-called chromia-forming coating
in that it forms a thin adherent chromia scale on the coating in service. Also, after
or before the diffusion of the chromium coating, a thermal barrier coating (TBC),
such as yttria-stablized zirconia, can be applied as an outermost coating to all or
portion of airfoil region 12 and platform surface 20a to provide thermal insulation
properties of the TBC.
[0019] Figure 2 illustrates a gas turbine blade precursor (intermediate component) that
includes the aluminum-bearing coating AL and the as-deposited metallic chromium-bearing
coating ECR on the airfoil and the root portion, respectively, applied using a method
pursuant to another embodiment of the present invention described below that overcomes
problems and difficulties that can be otherwise associated with providing a duplex
coating based on needed coating functionality as described in the COMPARISON EXAMPLE
set forth below. The chromium coating is applied as a very thin layer having a thickness
of 0.00127 to 0.127 mm (0.00005 to 0.005 inch).
[0020] The aluminum-bearing coating is applied in a first one step procedure by high temperature
vapor deposition, such as by chemical vapor deposition at or above 1038 °C (1900 degrees
F) pursuant to
US Patent Nos. 5,264,245;
4,132,816; and
3,486,927, by conventional above-the-pack processes, or other vapor deposition processes.
[0021] The chromium-bearing coating is applied after the aluminum-bearing coating using
a two step procedure that involves depositing a metallic coating comprising chromium
on the substrate at a relatively low temperature below 100 °C (212 degrees F) when
a liquid electrolytic deposition bath or liquid carrier medium is employed followed
by a high temperature heat treatment to diffuse chromium into the substrate. Exemplary
low temperature processes for depositing the metallic chromium coating include, but
are not limited to, electroplating or electrophoetric deposition using a liquid bath,
and slurry coating with chromium-bearing particles (e.g. Cr or Cr alloy particles)
in a liquid carrier followed by drying, all of which can be conducted below 100 °C
(212 degrees F) using liquid baths or liquid slurries. Certain other relatively low
temperature deposition processes can be employed to deposit the metallic coating comprising
chromium including, but not limited to, electro-spark discharge conducted typically
at less than 260 °C (500 degrees F), cladding conducted typically at less than 38
°C (100 degrees F), plasma spray conducted at less than 260 °C (500 degrees F), and
entrapment plating wherein Cr particles are entrapped in a Ni electroplated layer.
[0022] When the substrate comprises a gas turbine component having airfoil, platform and
root regions, a method embodiment is practiced by first applying a mask on a root
region of the component, then applying an aluminum-bearing coating, such as a diffusion
aluminide coating, on an airfoil region, de-masking the root portion, and then masking
on the already-coated airfoil region. Then, this method embodiment deposits a metallic
coating comprising chromium on at least a portion of a relatively lower temperature
root region that will be subject to hot corrosion, de-masks the airfoil region, followed
by diffusing the chromium into the alloy at the coated portion of the root region
to form a chromium-enriched surface coating on the portion of the root region. The
aluminum-bearing coating optionally can be applied to cover the airfoil region and
also an intermediate platform region and root shank region. An attachment portion,
such as a fir tree portion, of the root region may be left uncoated to enhance fatigue
life of the root region where it is connected to a turbine disk.
[0023] The chromium-enriched diffused coating applied on at least a portion of the root
region of a nickel base superalloy substrate typically comprises in the diffused condition
a Cr-enriched outermost diffusion zone comprising chromium, nickel, and other substrate
alloy elements in solid solution wherein Cr is present as a majority of the zone,
Figures 7 and 11A, 11B and inner diffusion zone between the outermost diffusion zone
and the substrate and comprising nickel, chromium, and other substrate alloy elements
wherein Cr is a minority of the zone, Figures 7, 11A, 11B. Another diffusion or reaction
zone may be present between the inner diffusion zone and substrate and comprise refractory
rich phases. This diffusion or reaction zone is very thin and is not visible in Figures
7 and 11A.
[0024] Practice of embodiments of the invention allow control of the Cr content and Cr depth
profile into the substrate to tailor hot corrosion protection as needed for a particular
service application. Typically, more Cr at the outermost coated substrate surface
will be more protective than less. More Cr can be provided by varying the thickness
of the Cr metallic coating and the diffusion heat treatment conditions.
COMPARISON EXAMPLE
[0025] This Comparison Example is offered to help illustrate the problems and difficulties
of forming such a duplex coating on a gas turbine blade by processing other than that
pursuant to the present invention.
[0026] For example, available high temperature (above 1038 °C (1900 degrees F)) pack or
vapor phase chromizing processes and high temperature (above 927 °C (1700 degrees
F)) pack, vapor phase or CVD aluminizing processes can be used to produce a turbine
blade with two environmental protection coatings (duplex coating). However problems
in processing and retaining high surface Cr have been observed. The masking used for
aluminizing can remove Cr from the chromized shank during the high temperature aluminizing
process. Namely, in order to coat a turbine blade with the duplex coating, the turbine
blade must be entirely chromized by a high temperature pack or vapor phase process
and then the resulting Cr-rich layer must be removed from the gas path surfaces 12,
20a prior to aluminizing or overcoating the gas path surfaces. To prevent aluminizing
of the root region 14, the root region is masked by placing it in masking powder (e.g.
alumina powder, NiO powder, etc.) residing in a containment box. However, this procedure
has resulted in unwanted reductions in Cr content of the previously applied Cr-enriched
layer on the root region and a reduction in its hot corrosion resistance as will now
be demonstrated.
[0027] A cast turbine blade having airfoil, platform, and root features of Figure 1 and
made of CMSX-4 nickel based superalloy (nominal composition in weight % of about 9.6%
Co, about 6.6% Cr, about 0.60 % Mo, about 6.4% W, about 3.0% Re, about 6.5% Ta, about
5.6% Al, about 1.0% Ti, about 0.1% Hf, balance Ni and incidental impurities) was chromized
all over and then grit blasted to remove the Cr-enriched coating from the first hotter
region that included the airfoil region 12 and platform surface 20a. The first hotter
region was electroplated to deposit a Pt metal layer and then aluminized by CVD to
form a Pt-modified diffusion aluminide coating on the first region. The second cooler
region (that included the platform surface 20b and root region 14) was then masked
with commercially available powder maskant M1 available from Akron Paint & Varnish
Co., 1390 Firestone Parkway, Akron Ohio.
[0028] The chromizing process was conducted using the following pack parameters: pure chromium
powder with aluminum oxide and NH
4Cl activator for 5 hours at 1066 °C (1950 degrees F).
[0029] The Pt electroplating was conducted using the following parameters set forth in
US Patent 5,788,823, which is incorporated herein by reference to this end, to deposit 0.3 mils of Pt
on the substrate. The aluminizing process was conducted using the following parameters:
1079 °C (1975 degrees F) for 1440 minutes in H
2/AlCl
3 atmosphere pursuant to
US Patent 5,264,245, which is incorporated herein by reference to this end.
[0030] Figure 5 shows concentration depth profiles of Cr at the shank portion 18 of the
turbine blade for the as-chromized condition (Pack Cr) and after masking and aluminizing
(Pack Cr + Aluminizing Cycle) to form the Pt-modified diffusion aluminide coating
on the first region that included the airfoil and platform surface 20a.
[0031] The enriched Cr content of the as-chromized coating on the second region as shown
in Figure 5 is a desirable chemistry for resisting hot corrosion attack. However,
as the graph shows, the Cr enrichment formed by the pack chromizing process is depleted
following the aluminizing process even when masking is present on the root (shank
18 and attachment portion 16 to prevent aluminum from depositing thereon). The Cr
content at the shank portion has been is lowered to below the CMSX-4 superalloy content
(nominal alloy Cr composition: 6.4% Cr by weight and is directionally exactly the
opposite Cr content desired to improve hot corrosion resistance. It is apparent that
the duplex coating processing of this Comparison Example failed to produce a turbine
blade with a desired Cr-enriched coating for hot corrosion attack resistance.
[0032] Pursuant to method embodiments of the present invention, the duplex coating is applied
using a sequence processing steps that overcomes the above-discussed problems and
difficulties demonstrated in the Comparison Example.
EXAMPLE 1:
[0033] Pursuant to an illustrative embodiment of the present invention, the following processing
steps are employed:
- 1. If a platinum-modified diffusion aluminide coating is to be formed on the gas path
surfaces 12, 20a, then these surfaces are optionally electroplated with a layer of
Pt pursuant to US Patent 5,788,832 which is already incorporated herein by reference. If a simple diffusion aluminde
coating is to be formed, then this step is omitted.
- 2. Masking the second region of the turbine blade (i.e. root region 14 and platform
surface 20b) with the M1 maskant powder mentioned above in a containment box. That
is, the root region 14 and platform surface 20b are embedded in the maskant powder
in the containment box.
- 3. Aluminize the first hotter region (i.e. airfoil 12 and platform surface 20a) to
form a diffusion aluminide coating, such as a Pt-modified diffusion aluminide coating
if step 1 is practiced, with the masking covering the second region.
- 4. Masking the diffusion aluminide coating on the first region.
- 5. Cr electroplating the second cooler region with the masking of step 2 covering
the diffusion aluminide coating formed in step 3. The Cr electroplating is conducted
at low temperature such as less than 100 °C (212 degrees F) using a liquid (e.g. aqueous)
electroplating bath. The Cr electroplate can be locally deposited by virtue of the
masking on the first region being effective under the low temperature plating bath
conditions.
- 6. Diffusing the Cr plating into the CMSX-4 substrate alloy to form the Cr-enriched
hot corrosion resistant coating wherein diffusing of the Cr plating improves bonding
with the superalloy substrate and makes the resulting Cr-rich layer more ductile.
[0034] The chromium electroplating process is conducted using plating conditions to deposit
a hexavalent hard, dense chromium electroplate comprising substantially pure Cr that
meets AMS (Aerospace Material Specification) 2438B for hard, dense chromium coatings
for aerospace material applications on steel materials. AMS 2338B is incorporated
herein by reference to this end.
[0035] In this example, the hard, dense substantially pure chromium electroplate was applied
commercially by a commercial electroplater Armoloy of Illinois, 118 Simonds Ave.,
DeKalb, Illinois, using proprietary plating conditions. The deposited Cr electroplating
was applied to a thickness of 8.7 micrometers or 3.5 micrometers. The electroplated
layer was substantially pure Cr; e.g. 99.9% by weight pure Cr and balance plating
impurities. The invention envisions electroplating Cr alloys, rather than pure Cr,
and also plating alternating layers of Cr and Ni.
[0036] The chromium electroplating can be conducted using any suitable parameters. For purposes
of illustration and not limitation, the following plating conditions can be used:
- 1. Vapor hone surfaces with an alumina slurry to clean surfaces to be plated.
- 2. Activate the surfaces to be plated by immersion in plating bath containing 250-400
g/L chromic acid and 2.5-4 g/L of sulfate catalyst (sulfuric acid) at 52-63°C and
applying a current (30-54 A/dm2 at 3 to 12 volts) such that the parts are anodes (which is opposite of Cr plate deposition)
for 30 seconds to 2 minutes.
- 3. Cr plate surfaces to be plated by immersion in plating bath and applying current
(such that the parts are cathodes) for 4 minutes to 30 minutes or as long as needed
to meet the thickness requirement for the Cr plating.
- 4. Rinse in 49 °C (120 degrees F)de-ionized water to remove majority of plating bath.
- 5. Rinse in hot de-ionized water to remove remaining plating bath and dry.
[0037] The CVD aluminizing process is conducted using the following parameters: 1079 °C
(1975 degrees F) for 1440 minutes in H
2/AlCl
3 atmosphere pursuant to
US Patent 5,264,245, which is incorporated herein by reference to this end. Other aluminizing processes
which can be used include, but are not limited to, pack, vapor phase, sputtering,
physical vapor deposition and slurry followed by diffusion heat treatment, electrophoretic
followed by diffusion heat treatment, and others.
[0038] For this example, the diffusion heat treatment of Cr was conducted at 1079 °C (1975
degrees F) for 4 hours in an Ar partial pressure atmosphere or at 1121 °C (2050 degrees
F) for 2 hours in an Ar partial pressure atmosphere to prevent oxidation.
[0039] Figure 6 is graph of Cr concentration versus distance into the CMSX-4 nickel base
superalloy substrate showing effects of Cr plating thickness and diffusion conditions
on Cr concentration in the substrate. In Figure 6, the distance of "0" is the surface
of the substrate. Figure 6 shows that the surface Cr content can be controlled to
be as low as 15 weight % or as high as 63 weight %. Also, Figure 6 shows that the
depth of Cr enrichment can be controlled as well. Typically, the Cr content and enrichment
depth can be balanced to provide acceptable hot corrosion resistance while minimizing
fatigue debit for the strains to be experienced by the component in use in the turbine
engine. Figure 6 presents two Cr plating thicknesses and two different diffusion heat
treatments illustrating a range of resultant Cr enrichments.
[0040] Figures 7 and 11A contain photomicrographs of the microstructure of a CMSX-4 specimen
electroplated with 8.7 µm of Cr plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating
at 1079 °C (1975 degrees F) for four hours. Figure 11B includes microprobe data of
the Cr-enriched diffused coating as a table and Figure 11C includes a plot showing
variation of Cr content over distance into the substrate alloy. The distance of "0"
is the surface of the substrate.
[0041] Figures 7 and 11A, 11B (microprobe table) and 11C (plot) results reveal that the
chromium-enriched diffused coating comprised a Cr-enriched outermost (Top) diffusion
zone comprising chromium, nickel, and other substrate alloy elements in solid solution
wherein Cr is present as a majority of the Top zone and inner diffusion zone (Diffusion)
between the outermost diffusion zone and the substrate and comprising nickel, chromium,
and other substrate alloy elements wherein Cr is a minority of the Diffusion zone.
Another diffusion or reaction zone may be present between the inner diffusion zone
and the substrate and comprise refractory rich phases. This diffusion or reaction
zone is very thin and is not visible in Figures 7 and 11A.
[0042] Figure 8 illustrates hot corrosion test results at 700 degrees C plotted as weight
change versus exposure hours for the various CMSX-4 specimens shown, which were tested
in duplicate. The test applied 1-2 mg/cm
2 of Na
2SO
4 to the specimen surface at each 20 hour specimen inspection and then exposed the
salted sample to 371 °C (700 degrees F) in a furnace which had a 1000 ppm SO
2/O
2 gas passing through a heated Pt catalyst to form SO
3. The SO
3 reacted with the salt at the test temperature to provide corrosion attack.
[0043] Figure 8 shows that the tested specimens coated pursuant to embodiments of the invention
exhibited essentially the same weight change over time, regardless of the thickness
of the Cr electroplate and Cr diffusion parameters employed. Bare (uncoated) CMSX-4
specimen lost substantial weight during the test.
[0044] Figure 9 is a photomicrograph of a CMSX-4 specimen electroplated with 8.7 µm of Cr
plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating at 1079 °C (1975 degrees F) for
four hours and subjected to the above 371 °C (700 degrees F)hot corrosion with Na
2SO
4 applied to the specimen as in Figure 8. Through-holes (one shown) through the specimen
were not coated and show aggressive hot corrosion attack while coated surfaces are
protected.
[0045] Figure 9 shows the aggressive nature of these test conditions to the bare (uncoated)
CMSX-4 alloy substrate and the resistance of the coated specimen surfaces to hot corrosion
attack.
[0046] Figure 10 is a photomicrograph of the microstructure of a CMSX-4 specimen electroplated
with 8.7 µm of Cr plating followed by a diffusion treatment by heating at 1079 °C
(1975 degrees F) for four hours and then subjected to hot corrosion at 700 degrees
C with Na
2SO
4 applied to the specimen surface as in Figure 8.
[0047] Figure 11C is a graphic plot showing variation of Cr content over distance into the
substrate alloy for the As-Plated sample (open triangle symbols), plated/diffusion-heat
treated sample (open square symbols), and plated/diffusion heat treated/hot corrosion
tested sample (open diamond symbols-Type I hot corrosion test). The distance of "0"
is the surface of the substrate.
[0048] Comparing the later two samples in Figure 11C, the Cr content after the hot corrosion
test is virtually unchanged.
EXAMPLE 2:
[0049] Pursuant to another illustrative embodiment of the present invention, the following
processing steps are employed:
1. If a platinum-modified diffusion aluminide coating is to be formed on the gas path
surfaces 12, 20a, then these surfaces are optionally electroplated with a layer of
Pt pursuant to US Patent 5,788,832 which is already incorporated herein by reference. If a simple diffusion aluminide
coating is to be formed, then this step is omitted.
2. Aluminize the first hotter region and the second region to form a diffusion aluminide
coating, such as a Pt-modified diffusion aluminide coating. No masking covering the
second region.
3. Removing the diffusion aluminide coating selectively from the second region by
grit blasting, machining or other technique to expose the substrate alloy, while leaving
the diffusion aluminide coating on the first region.
4. Masking the diffusion aluminide coating on the first region as described in Example
1.
5. Cr electroplating the exposed second cooler region with the masking of step 4 covering
the diffusion aluminide coating formed in step 2. The Cr electroplating is conducted
at low temperature such as less than 100 °C (212 degrees F) using a liquid electroplating
bath. The Cr electroplate can be locally deposited by virtue of the masking on the
first region being effective under the low room temperature plating bath conditions.
5. Diffusing the Cr plating into the CMSX-4 substrate alloy to form the Cr-enriched
hot corrosion resistant coating wherein diffusing of the Cr plating improves bonding
with the superalloy substrate and makes the resulting Cr-rich layer more ductile.
[0050] The chromium electroplating process is conducted by the commercial electroplater
of Example 1. The CVD aluminizing process is conducted using the parameters of Example
1. The diffusion heat treatment of Cr is conducted using the parameters of Example
1.
FURTHER EXAMPLES
[0051] Figures 3 and 4 illustrate alternative embodiments of the invention where, in Figure
3, an aluminized layer AL' with or without Pt is applied on the upper region of the
shank portion 18 from the platform surface 20b to a preselected distance or plane
below the platform 20 along with other coatings AL, CR as indicated; and where, in
Figure 4, an uncoated attachment portion 17 of the root region is provided at an even
cooler region of the turbine blade closer to the turbine disk, which portion 17 is
masked during both aluminizing and Cr plating. The attachment portion 17 comprises
bare (uncoated) substrate alloy where the blade design cannot tolerate any coating
along with other coatings AL, CR as indicated.
[0052] The invention allows for many combinations of Al, Al/Cr, Cr, and bare, uncoated areas
on a turbine blade to provide desired coating functionality as needed to suit different
service conditions in the gas turbine engine.
[0053] Although the invention has been described with respect to certain detailed embodiments
thereof, it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes in
form and detail thereof may be made without departing from the spirit and scope of
the claimed invention.
SUMMARY
[0054] In the following, the subject matter of the present disclosure is summarized as follows:
[0055] According to a first aspect, the present disclosure relates to a method of forming
a coating on a substrate, comprising the steps of first applying an aluminum-bearing
coating on a first region of the substrate, then depositing a metallic coating comprising
chromium on the substrate, and then diffusing the chromium into the substrate to form
a chromium-enriched diffused layer thereon.
[0056] The method according to the first aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of applying masking on said second region before the aluminum-bearing
coating is applied.
[0057] The method according to the first aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of applying masking on the aluminum-bearing coating before applying
the metallic coating.
[0058] The method according to the first aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of applying the aluminum-bearing coating on both said first region
and second region followed by removal of the aluminum-bearing coating from said adjacent
region before the metallic coating is applied.
[0059] In accordance with the method according to the first aspect of the present disclosure,
the metallic coating may be applied by using a liquid deposition medium. This liquid
deposition medium is preferably a electroplating bath or electrophoretic bath, or
a slurry of chromium-bearing particles.
[0060] In accordance with the method according to the first aspect of the present disclosure,
the aluminum-bearing coating may be applied as a diffusion aluminide.
[0061] According to a second aspect, the present disclosure relates to a method of forming
a duplex coating on a nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine blade, comprising the steps
of first applying an aluminum-bearing coating on an airfoil region of the blade, then
depositing a metallic coating comprising chromium on at least a portion of a root
region of the blade using a liquid deposition medium, and then diffusing the chromium
into the alloy to form a chromium-enriched layer on said portion of said root region.
[0062] The method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of applying masking on the root region before the aluminum-bearing
coating is applied on the airfoil region.
[0063] The method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of applying the aluminum-bearing coating on the airfoil region and
on the root region followed by removal of the aluminum-bearing coating from the root
region before the metallic overlay is applied to the root region.
[0064] The method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of applying masking on the aluminum-bearing coating before applying
the metallic coating.
[0065] In accordance with the method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure,
the metallic coating may be electroplated at a temperature less than 100°C (212 degrees
F).
[0066] In accordance with the method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure,
the aluminum-bearing coating may be applied to also cover a shank portion of said
root region such that the root region includes the shank portion covered by the aluminum-bearing
coating and an adjacent portion covered by the chromium-enriched coating.
[0067] The method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure may include the
additional step of leaving an attachment portion of the root region uncoated.
[0068] In accordance with the method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure,
the aluminum-bearing coating may be applied as a diffusion aluminide.
[0069] In accordance with the method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure,
the liquid deposition medium may be an electroplating bath or electrophoretic bath.
[0070] In accordance with the method according to the second aspect of the present disclosure,
the liquid deposition medium may be a slurry of chromium-bearing particles.
[0071] According to a third aspect, the present disclosure relates to a nickel or cobalt
based alloy turbine component precursor having an aluminum-bearing coating applied
on an airfoil region of the precursor and a metallic electroplated or electrophoretic
coating comprising chromium applied on at least a portion of a root region of the
precursor.
[0072] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component precursor according
to the third aspect of the present disclosure, the metallic coating may comprise a
majority of chromium.
[0073] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component precursor according
to the third aspect of the present disclosure, the aluminum-bearing coating may also
cover a shank portion of said root region such that the root region includes a shank
portion covered by the aluminum-bearing coating and an adjacent portion covered by
the metallic coating.
[0074] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component precursor according
to the third aspect of the present disclosure, an attachment portion of the root region
may left uncoated.
[0075] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component precursor according
to the third aspect of the present disclosure, the aluminum-bearing coating may comprise
a diffusion aluminide.
[0076] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component precursor according
to the third aspect of the present disclosure, the precursor may include a platform
region between the airfoil region and the root region, wherein a surface of the platform
facing toward the airfoil region includes the aluminum-bearing coating. A surface
of the platform region facing away from the airfoil region preferably includes the
metallic coating. As an alternative or in addition, a surface of the platform region
facing away from the airfoil region may include the aluminum-bearing coating.
[0077] According to a fourth aspect, the present disclosure relates to a nickel or cobalt
based alloy turbine component precursor having an aluminum-bearing coating applied
on an airfoil region of the precursor and a metallic coating comprising chromium-bearing
slurry particles applied on at least a portion of a root region of the precursor.
[0078] According to a fifth aspect, the present disclosure relates to a nickel or cobalt
based alloy turbine component having an aluminum-bearing coating applied on an airfoil
region of the blade and a chromium-enriched coating formed on at least a portion of
a root region by depositing a metallic electroplated or electrophoretic coating comprising
chromium and diffusing the chromium into the alloy at said portion of said root region.
[0079] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component according to
the fifth aspect of the present disclosure, the component may include a platform region
between the airfoil region and the root region, wherein a surface of the platform
facing toward the airfoil region includes the aluminum-bearing coating. A surface
of the platform region facing away from the airfoil region preferably includes the
chromium-bearing coating. As an alternative or in addition thereto the surface of
the platform region facing toward the airfoil region may include the aluminum-bearing
coating, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating preferably comprises a diffusion aluminide,
and/or wherein the aluminum-bearing coating also covers a shank portion of said root
region such that the root region includes a shank portion covered by the aluminum-bearing
coating and an adjacent portion covered by the chromium-enriched coating.
[0080] In accordance with the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component according to
the fifth aspect of the present disclosure, the an attachment portion of the root
region is uncoated.
[0081] According to a sixth aspect, the present disclosure relates to a nickel or cobalt
based alloy turbine component having an aluminum-bearing coating applied on an airfoil
region of the blade and a chromium-enriched coating formed on at least a portion of
a root region by depositing a metallic coating comprising chromium-bearing slurry
particles and diffusing the chromium into the alloy at said portion of said root region.
1. A method of forming a coating on a substrate, comprising the steps of first applying
an aluminum-bearing coating on a first region of the substrate, then depositing a
metallic coating comprising chromium on a second region of the substrate, and then
diffusing the chromium into the substrate to form a chromium-enriched diffused layer
thereon.
2. The method of claim 1, wherein the substrate is a nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine
blade, where the first region is an airfoil region (12) of the blade and the second
region is at least a portion of a root region (14) of the blade, and wherein the metallic
coating is deposited on at least a portion of a root region (14) of the blade by using
a liquid deposition medium.
3. The method of claim 2, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating is applied to also cover
a shank portion of said root region (14) such that the root region (14) includes the
shank portion covered by the aluminum-bearing coating and an adjacent portion covered
by the chromium-enriched coating, and wherein an attachment portion of the root region
(14) is preferably left uncoated.
4. The method of any one of the claims 1 to 3, wherein masking is applied on said second
region before the aluminum-bearing coating is applied, and where preferably masking
on the aluminum-bearing coating is applied before applying the metallic coating.
5. The method of any one of the claims 1 to 4, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating is
applied on both said first region and second region followed by removal of the aluminum-bearing
coating from an adjacent region before the metallic coating is applied.
6. The method of any one of the claims 1 to 5, wherein the metallic coating is deposited
on the second region of the substrate by using a liquid deposition medium, wherein
the liquid deposition medium is a electroplating bath or electrophoretic bath, and
wherein the electroplating bath has preferably a temperature of less than 100°C (212
degrees F), or wherein the liquid deposition medium is a slurry of chromium-bearing
particles.
7. The method of any one of the claims 1 to 6, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating comprises
a diffusion aluminide.
8. The method of any one of the claims 1 to 7, wherein the substrate is a nickel or cobalt
based alloy turbine component comprising a blade; wherein the first region of the
substrate is an airfoil region of the blade; and wherein the second region of the
substrate is at least a portion of a root region of the blade.
9. The method of claim 8, wherein the nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component
includes a platform region between the airfoil region and the root region, wherein
the aluminum-bearing coating is applied to a surface of the platform region facing
toward the airfoil region.
10. The method of claim 9, wherein the chromium-bearing coating is formed on a surface
of the platform region facing away from the airfoil region.
11. The method of claim 9 or 10, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating comprises a diffusion
aluminide.
12. The method of any one of the claims 8 to 11, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating
is also applied to a shank portion of said root region such that the root region includes
a shank portion covered by the aluminum-bearing coating and an adjacent portion covered
by the chromium-enriched coating.
13. The method of any one of the claims 8 to 12, wherein an attachment portion of the
root region is maintained uncoated.
14. The method of any one of the claims 10 to 13, wherein the chromium-bearing coating
is formed by depositing a metallic coating comprising chromium-bearing slurry particles
and diffusing the chromium into the alloy at said portion of said root region.
15. A nickel or cobalt based alloy turbine component precursor having an aluminum-bearing
coating applied on an airfoil region (12) of the precursor and a metallic electroplated
or electrophoretic coating comprising chromium or a metallic coating comprising chromium-bearing
slurry particles applied on at least a portion of a root region (14) of the precursor.
16. The precursor of claim 15, wherein the metallic coating comprises a majority of chromium.
17. The precursor of claim 15 or 16, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating also covers
a shank portion of said root region (14) such that the root region (14) includes a
shank portion covered by the aluminum-bearing coating and an adjacent portion covered
by the metallic coating.
18. The precursor of any one of claims 15 to 17, wherein an attachment portion of the
root region (14) is left uncoated.
19. The precursor of any one of claims 15 to 18, wherein the aluminum-bearing coating
comprises a diffusion aluminide.
20. The precursor of any one of claims 15 to 19, further including a platform region between
the airfoil region (12) and the root region, wherein a surface (20a) of the platform
region facing toward the airfoil region (12) includes the aluminum-bearing coating.
21. The precursor of claim 20, wherein a surface (20b) of the platform region facing away
from the airfoil region (12) includes the metallic coating or the aluminum-bearing
coating.